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3D Systems Accelerates Growth in Aerospace & Defense with Strategic Investments and Projected Leadership Position

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(Moderate)
Rhea-AI Sentiment
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3D Systems (NYSE: DDD) reported accelerated Aerospace & Defense momentum with quantified growth, capacity expansion, and technology programs driving U.S. onshore manufacturing capacity.

Key facts: A&D grew >15% in 2025 and is forecasted >20% in 2026, $35M+ projected production printing and custom metal parts revenue in 2026, an 80,000 sq ft phased expansion in Littleton CO, an $18.5M USAF-sponsored metal printing program through 2027, and a planned fully domestic large-frame metal AM ecosystem by 2027.

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Positive

  • A&D revenue >15% in 2025, >20% projected in 2026
  • Production printing and custom metal parts >$35M forecast for 2026
  • Littleton expansion adds up to 80,000 square feet capacity
  • $18.5M U.S. Air Force-sponsored metal printing program ongoing
  • Onshore end-to-end large-frame metal AM ecosystem planned by 2027

Negative

  • None.

News Market Reaction

+7.57%
35 alerts
+7.57% News Effect
+17.6% Peak in 31 hr 27 min
+$23M Valuation Impact
$332M Market Cap
1.4x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, DDD gained 7.57%, reflecting a notable positive market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +17.6% during that session. Our momentum scanner triggered 35 alerts that day, indicating elevated trading interest and price volatility. This price movement added approximately $23M to the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $332M at that time.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

Key Figures

A&D revenue growth 2025: over 15% A&D revenue growth 2026: more than 20% Production A&D revenue: over $35 million +5 more
8 metrics
A&D revenue growth 2025 over 15% Forecasted growth for Aerospace & Defense business in 2025
A&D revenue growth 2026 more than 20% Projected Aerospace & Defense growth in 2026
Production A&D revenue over $35 million Expected 2026 revenue from production systems and custom metal parts
Facility expansion up to 80,000 square feet Planned expansion of Littleton, Colorado A&D Application Center
USAF program funding $18.5 million Multi-phase U.S. Air Force-sponsored metal printing technology program
Large-frame print size over 1 meter Target print area for large-frame metal printing systems
Policy reference year Fiscal Year 2026 NDAA provisions restricting foreign-sourced 3D printing systems
Program timeline through 2027 Key milestones for next-generation metal printing program

Market Reality Check

Price: $2.57 Vol: Volume 3,169,587 versus 2...
normal vol
$2.57 Last Close
Volume Volume 3,169,587 versus 20-day average 3,626,224 (relative volume 0.87) indicates typical trading activity ahead of this news. normal
Technical Shares at $1.85 are trading below the 200-day moving average of $2.12 and about 62.99% under the 52-week high.

Peers on Argus

DDD gained 4.52% with mixed peer action: sector peers like UMAC, CAN, and OSS ap...
3 Up

DDD gained 4.52% with mixed peer action: sector peers like UMAC, CAN, and OSS appeared on the momentum scanner with gains between 4.20% and , but scanner data flags this as stock-specific rather than a broad sector move.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Dec 15 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Dec 15 Regulatory clearance Positive +2.6% FDA 510(k) clearance expanding VSP Orthopedics indications to adolescents.
Dec 09 Debt equitization Negative -16.9% Equitization of 0% 2026 notes into common shares with no cash proceeds.
Nov 11 Product launch Positive +4.5% Launch of next-generation stereolithography systems and materials at Formnext.
Nov 04 Earnings release Negative -5.1% Q3 2025 results with revenue decline, margin compression, and EBITDA loss.
Oct 30 Earnings date notice Neutral -6.9% Announcement of timing for Q3 2025 financial results and conference call.
Pattern Detected

Recent news — product launches, regulatory clearances, and capital structure moves — typically saw price reactions that aligned with the underlying sentiment, with only one neutral event drawing a negative move.

Recent Company History

Over the last few months, 3D Systems has balanced strategic expansion with balance sheet restructuring. In Q3 2025, revenue was $91.2M with margins under pressure and a net loss, while later announcements focused on new stereolithography platforms and an FDA 510(k) clearance expanding VSP Orthopedics indications. A large $30.8M note equitization weighed on shares. Today’s A&D growth update extends this shift toward higher-value industrial and aerospace applications.

Market Pulse Summary

The stock moved +7.6% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with man...
Analysis

The stock moved +7.6% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with management’s emphasis on Aerospace & Defense as a high-growth, higher-margin driver, backed by projected A&D revenue growth above 20% in 2026 and expected production revenue over $35 million. Past product and regulatory milestones often saw aligned price moves, but prior equity exchanges created pressure. Investors would need to weigh execution on the Littleton expansion and government-backed programs against balance sheet constraints.

Key Terms

national defense authorization act (ndaa), department of defense (dod), additive manufacturing, laser powder-bed fusion, +3 more
7 terms
national defense authorization act (ndaa) regulatory
"National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2026 that restrict foreign-sourced"
An annual federal law that sets the budget, priorities and rules for a country’s military and defense programs. Like a household master plan that decides how much to spend, what to buy and what rules to follow, it matters to investors because it shapes defense contractors’ revenue, government procurement, research funding and regulatory requirements, creating winners and losers across related industries and supply chains.
department of defense (dod) regulatory
"foreign-sourced 3D printing systems for Department of Defense (DoD) programs"
The Department of Defense (DoD) is the U.S. federal agency responsible for national security, armed forces, and military programs. For investors, the DoD matters because its purchasing decisions, budgets, and procurement rules can create large, stable revenue streams or sudden contract opportunities for companies that supply equipment, technology, or services—think of it as a major, predictable customer whose orders can move a supplier’s business and stock value.
additive manufacturing technical
"a leading provider of additive manufacturing solutions"
Additive manufacturing, often called 3D printing, builds physical parts by laying down material layer by layer from a digital design, rather than cutting or molding from a solid block. It matters to investors because it can cut production time and waste, enable cheaper prototypes and customized products, and reshape supply chains—changes that can lower costs, speed new products to market, and create competitive advantages that affect a company's revenue and margins.
laser powder-bed fusion technical
"program to develop next-generation laser powder-bed fusion technologies for large format"
A metal 3D-printing process that builds parts layer by layer by spreading a thin bed of metal powder and fusing selected areas with a high-powered laser, similar to drawing each slice of an object and stacking them into a finished piece. It matters to investors because it can cut material waste, enable complex light-weight designs, speed prototyping and small-batch production, and create demand for specialized machines, powders and services that can change manufacturing costs and supply chains.
america makes technical
"selected for certification under the America Makes JAQS-SQ framework"
A public–private institute that promotes and coordinates research, standards, and adoption of additive manufacturing (3D printing) in the United States. Think of it as a central hub that helps companies and researchers turn new 3D printing ideas into reliable products and industry practices; for investors, its work can speed commercialization, reduce technical risk, shape supply chains, and influence which technologies and firms gain market credibility.
national institute for aviation research (niar) technical
"in collaboration with the National Institute for Aviation Research (NIAR) aims to scale"
A research and testing center focused on aircraft and aviation systems that develops new technologies, runs safety and certification tests, and helps train skilled workers for the aerospace industry. Investors pay attention because the institute’s research and approvals can speed or slow product development, affect regulatory compliance and safety credentials, and influence the competitiveness and costs of companies that design, build, or maintain aircraft—much like a trusted testing lab or inspection agency for cars.
as9100-certified technical
"European operations provide aerospace-focused design and application expertise in Leuven, Belgium (AS9100-certified)"
AS9100-certified means a company has passed an independent audit showing its quality-management system meets the AS9100 standard, which adapts general ISO 9001 rules with extra controls for aerospace and defense — covering safety, traceability, documentation and risk controls. For investors, it signals lower risk of manufacturing errors, easier qualification as a supplier to aircraft and defense customers, and stronger prospects for stable contracts and predictable production, like a factory following a safety-rated recipe with inspection stamps.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

Aerospace & Defense on Track to Become Company's Largest Industrial Business in 2026, Supported by Ongoing Investments and Favorable U.S. Policy Tailwinds

ROCK HILL, S.C., Jan. 05, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- 3D Systems (NYSE: DDD), a leading provider of additive manufacturing solutions, today announced significant momentum in its Aerospace & Defense (A&D) business, including robust revenue growth projections, a major U.S. facility expansion, and key technological advancements. These initiatives position the company to capitalize on rising demand for secure, U.S.-based manufacturing in national security and space applications—further supported by recent provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2026 that restrict foreign-sourced 3D printing systems for Department of Defense (DoD) programs, creating additional tailwinds for domestic providers. Complementary global operations continue to support international customers valuing regional production and worldwide expertise—driving sustained revenue growth, margin expansion, and shareholder value.

Key Highlights:

  • Strong Revenue Trajectory: The A&D business is forecasted to have grown over 15% in 2025, accelerating to more than 20% in 2026. Revenue from production printing systems and custom metal parts—core recurring elements of the business—is expected to exceed $35 million in 2026, driven by increasing adoption in high-reliability defense and space programs, with further upside from NDAA-related demand shifts.
  • Projected Business Leadership: After several years of sustained double-digit growth, A&D is on track to become 3D Systems’ largest and fastest-growing industrial business in 2026, fueled by rising demand across crewed/uncrewed aircraft, naval platforms, defense systems, rocket propulsion, and satellite systems.
  • Strategic Capacity Expansion: 3D Systems is adding up to 80,000 square feet to its Littleton, Colo., facility, significantly enhancing its A&D Application Center of Excellence. This phased investment expands capacity for application development, process qualification, validation, and production-scale manufacturing—supporting accelerated innovation and strengthened domestic supply chain resilience.
  • Fully Qualified Production Scaling: The Littleton facility has been selected for certification under the America Makes JAQS-SQ framework. This effort, under the National Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining, in collaboration with the National Institute for Aviation Research (NIAR) aims to scale defense industrial base capabilities for qualified additive manufacturing (AM) production, enabling accelerated qualification and deployment of additively manufactured defense components. This leverages the company’s extensive Littleton quality infrastructure established through its medical technology business, where high-performance metal implants for patients have been manufactured over many years, such as titanium implants created on the DMP 350 system.
  • Next-Generation Metal Printing Platform: The company is progressing on schedule in its multi-phase, $18.5 million U.S. Air Force-sponsored program to develop next-generation laser powder-bed fusion technologies for large format, high-efficiency metal part production. These technologies are essential for the application of metal 3D printing to an expanding range of U.S. defense systems. Key program milestones remain on track through 2027.
  • Unique Fully-Domestic U.S. Ecosystem: When completed in 2027, 3D Systems will stand alone as the only U.S. provider of a complete, end-to-end metal additive manufacturing ecosystem entirely onshore for large-frame metal printing systems (over 1 meter print area)—encompassing system design (San Diego, Calif.), next-generation printer manufacturing (Rock Hill, S.C.), and certified metal parts production with advanced application development (Littleton, Colo.). This uniquely positions the company to meet growing demand for secure domestic supply chains.
  • Complementary Global Capabilities: Paralleling the company’s U.S. A&D infrastructure, European operations provide aerospace-focused design and application expertise in Leuven, Belgium (AS9100-certified), and metal printer production in Riom, France—directly supporting European, Korean, Japanese, and other international A&D customers. In addition, the NAMI joint venture in Saudi Arabia—now the Kingdom's first AS/EN 9100-certified additive manufacturing provider—is advancing localized A&D solutions, including a collaboration with Lockheed Martin to qualify and manufacture mission-critical components within the Kingdom for global markets.

“Aerospace and defense customers worldwide increasingly require a reliable partner that delivers qualified, scalable solutions with speed, security, and supply chain resilience—supported by deep regional expertise and seamless global capabilities,” said Dr. Jeffrey Graves, president and CEO of 3D Systems. “Our Littleton expansion and strategic investments are significantly strengthening our U.S.-based Application Center of Excellence with advanced engineering, qualification-ready platforms, and expanded production capacity—dramatically accelerating the path from prototype to mission-critical deployment and improving outcomes for customers across our U.S., European, and international operations. Recent U.S. policy developments, including NDAA provisions, provide an additional tailwind that aligns closely with our ongoing domestic investments.”

The Littleton expansion supports 3D Systems' application-specific strategy, combining hardware, materials, software, and expertise across four core value drivers:

  • Supply Chain Resilience: Regionalized manufacturing reduces lead times and risks, critical for mission readiness. For example, collaboration with Huntington Ingalls Industries enabled first-to-market copper-nickel (CuNi30) alloy solutions for naval components, dramatically shortening production timelines.
  • New Application Development: Through its Application Innovation Group (AIG), 3D Systems co-develops lightweight, consolidated designs with customers. The expanded Littleton Center accelerates qualification and scaling, offering direct engineering collaboration, pilot production, and flexible technology transfer.
  • Robust Printing Solutions: 3D Systems’ low-oxygen direct metal printing technology ensures consistent, high-quality output for flight-critical applications. Additionally, in partnership with NIAR and the America Makes Joint Metal Additive Database Definition (JMADD), 3D Systems is working to develop materials allowables on the DMP 350 system that will facilitate additional programs for challenging end-uses, such as flight, to migrate to 3D Systems platforms.
  • Propulsion and Casting Applications: QuickCast® Air and additive casting workflows enable complex geometries, rapid iteration, and cost reduction in aviation, space, and energy. Participation in the Penn State-led IMPACT 3.0 program advances additive integration into casting/forging workflows. These capabilities have delivered significant benefits in advanced rocket propulsion systems, including simplified designs, enhanced performance, and faster production cycles.

“We are prioritizing A&D applications where additive manufacturing delivers maximum mission impact—from shipbuilding and advanced defense systems to aviation and space,” said Dr. Mike Shepard, vice president, aerospace & defense business at 3D Systems. “Our broad technology portfolio and ability to co-develop and efficiently scale critical applications have been key to our success.”

These initiatives reinforce 3D Systems' leadership in high-stakes additive manufacturing, positioning the company for sustained growth, improved margins, and lasting competitive advantage.

About 3D Systems

For nearly 40 years, Chuck Hull’s curiosity and desire to improve the way products were designed and manufactured gave birth to 3D printing, 3D Systems, and the additive manufacturing industry. Since then, that same spark continues to ignite the 3D Systems team as we work side-by-side with our customers to change the way industries innovate. As a full-service solutions partner, we deliver industry-leading 3D printing technologies, materials and software to high-value markets such as medical and dental; aerospace, space and defense; transportation and motorsports; AI infrastructure; and durable goods. Each application-specific solution is powered by the expertise and passion of our employees who endeavor to achieve our shared goal of Transforming Manufacturing for a Better Future.  

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements made in this release that are not statements of historical or current facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to be materially different from historical results or from any future results or projections expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In many cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by terms such as "believes," "belief," "expects," "may," "will," "estimates," "intends," "anticipates" or "plans" or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology. Forward-looking statements are based upon management’s beliefs, assumptions, and current expectations and may include comments as to the company’s beliefs and expectations as to future events and trends affecting its business and are necessarily subject to uncertainties, many of which are outside the control of the company. The factors described under the headings "Forward-Looking Statements" and "Risk Factors" in the company’s periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as other factors, could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected or predicted in forward-looking statements. Although management believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, forward-looking statements are not, and should not be relied upon as a guarantee of future performance or results, nor will they necessarily prove to be accurate indications of the times at which such performance or results will be achieved. The forward-looking statements included are made only as of the date of the statement. 3D Systems undertakes no obligation to update or review any forward-looking statements made by management or on its behalf, whether as a result of future developments, subsequent events or circumstances or otherwise.



Investor Contact: investor.relations@3dsystems.com
Media Contact: press@3dsystems.com

FAQ

What A&D revenue growth did 3D Systems (DDD) report for 2025–2026?

The company forecasts A&D growth of >15% in 2025 and >20% in 2026.

How much production printing revenue does 3D Systems (DDD) expect in 2026?

3D Systems expects production printing systems and custom metal parts revenue to exceed $35 million in 2026.

What facility expansion is 3D Systems (DDD) making for aerospace & defense?

A phased Littleton, Colorado expansion adding up to 80,000 sq ft for application development and production-scale manufacturing.

What is the scope of the USAF-sponsored program mentioned by 3D Systems (DDD)?

A multi-phase $18.5 million program to develop next-generation laser powder-bed fusion technologies, with milestones on track through 2027.

When will 3D Systems (DDD) have a fully domestic large-frame metal AM ecosystem?

The company expects the complete U.S. end-to-end large-frame metal AM ecosystem to be in place by 2027.

How do recent U.S. policy changes affect 3D Systems (DDD) aerospace demand?

NDAA provisions restricting foreign-sourced 3D printing systems for DoD programs are cited as a tailwind supporting increased domestic demand.
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