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Eye of Riyadh
Technology & IT | Saturday 17 September, 2016 2:50 pm |
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GE to invest $1.4 billion in 3D printing acquisitions

US conglomerate General Electric announced that it intends to buy two European companies that specialize in 3D printing — Arcam AB of Sweden and SLM Solutions Group of Germany — for $1.4 billion.
The two companies would be put under GE’s aviation division, it said in a statement.

Established in 1997 and based at Molndal in southern Sweden, Arcam AB uses electron beams in 3D printing of metallic parts for the aeronautics and health care industries.
It employs about 285 people, and had revenues of $68 million in 2015.

SLM Solutions Group, based in Lubeck, Germany, makes laser equipment for use in 3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, for the aeronautics, energy, health care and automobile industries. It had revenues of $74 million in 2015.

“Additive manufacturing is a key part of GE’s evolution into a digital industrial company,” GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt said. “We are poised to not only benefit from this movement as a customer, but spearhead it as a leading supplier.”

The conglomerate expects to reap up to $1 billion a year from 3D printing by 2020 and anticipates economies in production costs on the order of $3-5 billion over the next ten years.

GE plans to keep the headquarters of the two companies in Europe, using it as a base for developing a global 3D printing business.

Both acquisitions are structured as public tender offers for all outstanding shares of stock. According to GE, it will retain the headquarters and key operating locations of Arcam and SLM, with management teams and staff remaining in place.

“We chose these two companies for a reason,” said GE Aviation president and CEO David Joyce, whom the companies will report into. “They each bring two different, complementary additive technology modalities as individual anchors for a new GE additive equipment business.”

“Additive provides a new palette for engineers to create. Parts are also being designed in GE Power, Oil & Gas, Healthcare and across GE’s services businesses. We see value potential to reduce product cost and improve NPI [new product introduction] spend. Ultimately, as we develop more productive machines, we can build additive manufacturing ‘as a service’ for our customers.”

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