In this case, you could use Point.
In general, aesthetics aside, often there are enough trivial helper methods related to something like this that it makes sense to make a class for it to hold them, rather than have that logic scattered all over. Sometimes even just having a good toString() for debugging and logging is reason enough.
Where very high performance is a concern, make high-traffic trivial helper methods final, so that they can be inlined.
Where the only things the potential members have in common is that they're returned by a function, definitely make a class if you can see a future where they have more in common.
In some cases, consider returning void, and passing in a larger-scoped context object of some kind on which the method can set the return values. This should be used with great caution - it can easily cause coupling creep.