**Price:** $11.62 | **Market Cap:** $994M | **EV/Sales:** 1.6x
Long SSYS. Here's why the market is missing this.
# The Core Thesis
Robotics and additive manufacturing solve the reshoring problem everyone talks about but nobody has an answer for. You can't bring manufacturing back to the US competing on labor rates. But lights-out factories with 3D printing and robotic automation change the equation completely.
Stratasys has the infrastructure already built for this in aerospace and defense.
# Why Defense Matters
ULTEM 9085/1010 thermoplastics are qualified for flight-ready parts on Boeing, Lockheed, and Northrop programs. Once certified in aerospace, switching costs are massive. These qualifications lock in multi-year contracts.
The Air Force operates thousands of aging aircraft where replacement parts are obsolete. C-130s, KC-135s, F-16s. Traditional supply chains can't solve this. Additive manufacturing is the only path forward.
Real world proof: Aurora Flight Sciences built a jet-powered UAV with 80% of structural components printed in ULTEM 9085. Hit 150+ mph and cut time-to-market in half.
Military units are already deploying this. 101st Airborne and 25th Infantry Division are using Stratasys tech for drone and UAS production at forward locations.
# The Business Model
Defense contractors don't buy one printer. They deploy across multiple facilities once qualified. Each installation generates:
* Consumables revenue (filaments, resins) at high margins
* Software licensing fees (GrabCAD Print, certification systems)
* On-demand manufacturing service contracts
It's recurring revenue that looks like hardware sales on the surface.
# The Robotics Angle
Retail spent two years obsessed with AI. The rotation is happening now toward robotics. Optimus updates, Figure demos, Boston Dynamics going mainstream. The narrative is shifting.
Here's what people miss: robots need things to manufacture. That's where additive comes in. Boston Dynamics is already a Stratasys customer.
When humanoid robotics scales, the manufacturing infrastructure needs to exist. Stratasys is positioning for this with automation-ready systems.
# What's Already Happening
DoD digital thread initiative is building secure databases of qualified part files for distributed manufacturing. Pentagon is preparing for on-demand production at forward-deployed locations globally.
NATO and Indo-Pacific defense budgets are expanding. Distributed logistics requirements are accelerating. Commercial aerospace has record backlogs that require additive to meet delivery timelines.
The infrastructure is being built right now.
# The Setup
1.6x sales for a company with:
* Certification moat in aerospace (qualified materials take years to replicate)
* Installed base across major defense contractors
* Roadmap into carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastics for aluminum replacement
* Software ecosystem creating switching costs similar to NVIDIA with CUDA
Downside is limited if they remain a hardware vendor. Upside is significant if defense spending continues and they transition toward manufacturing-as-a-service with robotic integration. The re-rating from equipment to infrastructure platform would be substantial.
Holding SSYS through the robotics cycle and defense budget expansion.