ashimakumari
Why do we need to check whether x, y and z are even?
I think if xyz is a number then only units digit needs to be even, right?
Or did I misinterpret the question?
I'm guessing you're thinking that "xyz" is a three-digit number, where x is the hundreds digit, y the tens digit, and z the ones digit. That's not the intention here; here xyz is the product (multiplication) of x, y and z. Unless a question specifically tells you that letters represent digits in a number, then if you see something like cd or wxyz, it always means you're multiplying letters together.
And while I don't know if this will always be true (strictly speaking, it doesn't need to be), the only real GMAT questions I can recall where letters represent digits use capital letters. So if you see something like "ABC", then that
sometimes (but only if the question also says so) will represent a three-digit number. But if the question doesn't tell you A, B and C are digits, then ABC would always mean the product A*B*C. I can't recall a single official question which uses lower-case letters ("abc") to represent digits, though I can't absolutely promise there aren't any. It is a convention in math to use capital letters for digits, but I'd imagine many prep company questions would not follow that convention.