Canadian Manufacturing

GE acquires two 3-D printing companies in US$1.4B shopping spree

by The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Financing Manufacturing Operations Supply Chain Technology / IIoT Aerospace Automotive Energy Transportation


Industrial giant GE said the acquisition of Arcam AB and SLM Solutions Group AB will boost revenue within its 3-D printing business to $1 billion by 2020

GE researchers expose a pattern in UV light to print the intricate patterns on an ultrasound probe all at once, avoiding hours of cutting and refinement. PHOTO: General Electric

GE has put a focus on 3-D printing. In the image above, researchers expose a pattern in UV light to print the intricate patterns on an ultrasound probe all at once, avoiding hours of cutting and refinement. PHOTO: General Electric

WASHINGTON, D.C.—General Electric is continuing its push into the digital realm, spending $1.4 billion to acquire two European 3-D printing companies.

At the same time, it’s upping its old-school manufacturing capabilities with technology that will allow it to quickly punch out components for the automotive, airline and health industries at the whim of any client.

The Fairfield, Conn. company said it expects the acquisition of Arcam AB and SLM Solutions Group AB to boost revenue within its 3-D printing business to $1 billion by 2020.

GE has shed most of its financial service business to focus on its high-tech industrial operations. It had, before the deal announced Sept. 6, invested $1.5 billion in 3-D manufacturing technologies since 2010.

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Last February, in a letter to shareholders, GE Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Immelt promised an earnings boost and payout to shareholders while detailing his vision of a more nimble, technology-based company. Once the most valuable company in the world, GE’s market value has declined by about $70 billion during the past decade.

Shares of General Electric Co., which are up more than 23 per cent this year, slipped about 1 per cent in midday trading.

Analyst Kenneth Wong at Citi noted that GE paid a premium of about 36 per cent for SLM Solutions and more than 53 per cent for Arcam and investors took note, boosting shares of other 3-D printing companies. 3D Systems shares jumped more than 6 per cent and Stratasys rose about 5 per cent in midday trading.

In its 2016 report, Wohlers Associates, an independent 3-D printing technology consulting firm, says the industry grew by $1 billion for the second year in a row, to more than $5 billion. The number of manufacturers selling industrial-grade 3-D printers doubled from 2011 to 2015 and that about 278,000 desktop 3-D printers were sold worldwide last year, according to Wohlers.

GE said it will keep the headquarters of the two companies in place and retain management and employees.

Sweden’s Arcam AB focuses on customers in the aerospace and health care industries. Arcam generated $68 million in revenues in 2015 and has about 285 employees. SLM Solutions Group, based in Germany, has customers are in the aerospace, energy, health care, and automotive industries. SLM had $74 million in revenues last year and has 260 employees.

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