Barely over a week after it released (very) delayed first-quarter results, 3D Systems (DDD -1.44%) went back to the printing presses to publish a new set of quarterlies. Investors weren't impressed with the 3D printing company's Q2, as the stock traded down by almost 19% over the course of this week, according to data compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Lower revenue, but narrower net loss
On Thursday, 3D Systems unveiled those Q2 figures. These revealed that the company's revenue slipped by 12% year over year to just over $113 million. Not surprisingly, this decline was due mainly to lower sales of printers, which in turn was because of one unnamed customer in the dental field which reduced its purchases of 3D Systems machines. This drop was offset to some degree by an increase in services revenue. However, this wasn't enough to halt the decline of the total.
On the bottom line, the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) net loss was $27.3 million, a slight improvement over the nearly $29 million shortfall of 2023's Q2. On a non-GAAP (adjusted), per-share basis, the company's net loss was $0.14.
This meant a double miss for 3D Systems, as analysts tracking the stock were modeling a higher revenue figure of $116.6 million and a much narrower adjusted-net loss of $0.05 per share.
Revenue guidance disappoints
3D Systems also updated its full-year 2024 guidance. The company now anticipates its revenue will come in at $450 million to $460 million. Yet even if it hit the top end of that range, the number would be lower than 2023's $488 million-plus. It's also some distance below the average analyst projection of $474 million.
The company added that its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) should land near break-even in Q4. It did not provide an annual forecast for the line item, nor did it proffer any bottom-line guidance.