The 3D Printing Industry Will Be Reshaped
After a decade of economic growth, we have entered a recession. Many companies are already switching to survival mode, dramatically reducing their budgets. Unfortunately, R&D, product development, and new manufacturing equipment budgets – which fund most 3D printing initiatives – will be some of the first reduced. With overall spending on 3D printing likely to contract this year, an already crowded industry comes under increased pressure to deliver value. We explore how this economic downturn will reshape the industrial 3D printing industry.
The 3D Printing Market
The industrial 3D printing market includes printers, printed parts, software, materials; and services include equipment maintenance and consulting work. There are many applications of these products and services which the Wohler’s report categorizes below:
Broken down more simply, there are three major categories of applications:
1) Prototyping (cosmetic and functional)
2) End-use parts
3) Tooling (dies, molds, jigs, fixtures, and other manufacturing aids)
Industrial 3D printing consumption usually comes out of three budgets: R&D, product development, and manufacturing. R&D typically invests in 3D printing for evaluating new materials and processes, product development for prototyping, and manufacturing for tooling and end-use parts. Most companies reduce all three of these budgets during a recession, leading to decreased 3D printing consumption. But before we dive deeper into this depressing topic, let’s take a moment to appreciate the good times.
Good Times
The global economy moves in cycles of expansion and contraction. Bull market expansions encourage corporate investment in R&D, new products, and upgrading manufacturing assets. Strategic initiatives like adopting new 3D printing technologies or growing current additive manufacturing capabilities rely on these types of corporate spending. We have just enjoyed one of the longest, largest bull markets in history with the S&P Index growing 400% over the past 11 years.
Economic expansions drive upticks in corporate spending and venture capital investment. In the last few years, over $3B of venture capital has flowed into the 3D printing companies, roughly equivalent to a quarter of the current size of the whole 3D printing market (source: pitchbook). This funding has launched many startups (ours included) and fueled the growth of existing 3D printing companies. In this last bull cycle, we have also seen established companies like GE, HP, and Xerox enter the industry with both acquisitions and their own technology development. In 2019 alone, 42 new industrial 3d printer OEMs emerged, an increase from 135 at the start of the year. 3D printing has become a fertile landscape of companies and technologies. This has been very inviting for customers to come and graze, but now a drought is setting in…
R.I.P. Good Times
While aspects of the pandemic present future opportunities for 3D printing companies to help digitize, shorten, and de-risk supply chains, the recession is certainly negative for near-term revenues. Venture capital is also starting to dry up. Most 3D printing companies recognize this and are already battening down the hatches, raising money where possible, and reducing expenses. Most larger 3D printing companies have already done layoffs. You can read more about the adjustments that we made here: How Digital Alloys is Persevering Through the Pandemic. Companies know their optimal reaction should be proportionate to the future market conditions, but these are very hard to predict.
The sectors that consume the most industrial 3D printing are industrial/oil&gas, aerospace, automotive, consumer, and medical. With the potential exception of medical, all of these sectors are highly cyclical. The aerospace and oil & gas industries are especially damaged due to the current Coronavirus related travel restrictions (transportation is the largest consumer of oil).
When revenues decrease, spend follows. The below charts illustrate the impact of the last recession on R&D and manufacturing activity, represented by the PMI index.
The IHS Markit Composite PMI (in the chart above) measures “changes in the working conditions of private companies in the manufacturing and service sectors.” It indicates a large reduction in current manufacturing activity. This is because the pandemic has constrained both supply and demand. While we are making progress reopening manufacturing facilities, uncertainty remains around overall economic demand. If consumers spend and travel less for an extended period of time it will have a lasting impact on the automotive, commercial aerospace, and consumer products industries.
To continue reading, please find the full, original post here: https://www.digitalalloys.com/blog/3d-printing-industry-reshaped/
Account Executive at Full Throttle Falato Leads - We can safely send over 20,000 emails and 9,000 LinkedIn Inmails per month for lead generation
1 个月Alex, thanks for sharing! I am hosting a live monthly roundtable every first Wednesday at 11am EST to trade tips and tricks on how to build effective revenue strategies. I would love to have you be one of my special guests! We will review topics such as: -LinkedIn Automation: Using Groups and Events as anchors -Email Automation: How to safely send thousands of emails and what the new Google and Yahoo mail limitations mean -How to use thought leadership and MasterMind events to drive top-of-funnel -Content Creation: What drives meetings to be booked, how to use ChatGPT and Gemini effectively Please join us by using this link to register: https://forms.gle/iDmeyWKyLn5iTyti8 #sales
Sales Specialist at Full Throttle Falato Leads
3 个月Alex, thanks for sharing! How is biz?
Additive Manufacturing Program Manager
4 年A very interesting point of view! As you say in the conclusions, simple solutions that solve near-term business problems will be needed, I believe that the 3D printing industry has the necessary requirements. Only time will tell, in the meantime we need determination and imagination!
Business Mentor, Consultant, and Board Member
4 年ContextWorld just came out with a report that says YoY the number of industrial 3D printers shipped in 2020 is expected to decline by only 2%. The more interesting data point to me is that 4Q19 was 23% down (!!) compared to 4Q18. Why do you think that is?
Director - Research and Analysis @ The ITB Group | Automotive Consulting
4 年Hi Alex, thank you for the analysis. It is not a pretty picture, but it is best to have a clear-eyed view like this to find the ways forward.