What happened to 3D printing stocks?

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In this piece, we will take a look at the performance and developments surrounding 3D printing stocks.

A big reason Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) is widely credited to be one of the most advanced personal computing companies in the world is the firm's ability to blend in a device's design with high end specifications. A key aspect of product design is manufacturing, which has slowly grown to become one of the most advanced industries in the world. Advances in manufacturing have also nearly completely re shaped the landscape of today's technologies, with one high end manufacturing category, i.e. 3D printing or additive manufacturing, reshaping the way designers, businesses, and consumers produce and order gadgets.

3D printing's utility allows high end jet engine manufacturers, such as General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) and RTX Corporation (NYSE:RTX) subsidiary Pratt & Whitney to fabricate complex components with high degrees of precision. At the same time, it also enables firms like the Ireland based medical device manufacturer Medtronic plc (NYSE:MDT) to create life like models of human organs such as the heart for testing, training, and other uses. For a detailed look at how GE and others are using 3D printing, you should read 10 Best 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing Stocks To Buy.

While the allure of 3D printing to transform industries and generate revenue has always been strong, these stocks, like others that require significant capital investment, fluctuate in response to economic conditions. As proof, consider the performance of the Solactive 3D Printing Index (CHF). It is one of the earliest collections of 3D printing stocks which predates Ark Investment's well known The 3D Printing ETF (BATS:PRNT). Year to date, the Solactive index is down by 2.4%. However, the 3D printing stock index closed 3.9% higher on April 11th, which has proven as one of the most important stock market dates this year. The following day, markets and investor sentiment reworked their expectations for interest rate cuts later this year after evaluating fresh inflation data and earnings from big banks and saw them struggle with high costs which disappointed Wall Street estimates for net interest income. You can read more about this turmoil by clicking on 20 Most Profitable Banks in the US in 2024.

Shifting gears, while 3D printing stocks have responded negatively to investors shifting their rate cut expectations forward, individual stocks might be doing better. Some of the oldest 3D printing stocks you're likely to find are Stratasys Ltd. (NASDAQ:SSYS) and 3D Systems Corporation (NYSE:DDD). These two have been trading on the stock market since the 1990s, and among them, Startsys's shares have been the better performers. They are up by 466% in all time price gains, for a nice chunk of returns which peaked in 2014 when the shares touched $140. And just as is the case for the Solactive 3D Printing Index (CHF) these 3D printing stocks also jumped in 2021 after investors and media hyped up the potential offered by printers to create alternatives to traditional supply chain and manufacturing resources that were harmed by the post pandemic lockdowns.