Battle between 3-D printing companies Stratasys and Nano Dimension heats up

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The battle between 3-D printing companies Nano Dimension Ltd. and Stratasys Ltd. entered a new phase on Thursday, with the former launching a tender offer for Stratasys just moments after the company unveiled a deal with Desktop Metal Inc.

Stratasys
SSYS,
-4.03%

and Desktop Metal
DM,
-4.03%

said they had agreed to combine in an all-stock deal valued at $1.8 billion.

Then Israel-based Nano Dimension
NNDM,
-2.05%

launched an all-cash tender offer at $18 to purchase shares that would boost its stake in Minneapolis-based Stratasys to 53% to 55%.

Nano Dimension offered exactly that sumย on March 9 when it made its first offer for the polymer 3-D printing company and disclosed that it was Stratasysโ€™ largest shareholder with about 14.5% of the outstanding shares.

After the Stratasys board rejected that offer, Nano Dimension sweetened it to $20.05 a share, which the board said โ€œcontinues to substantially undervalue Stratasys in light of its standalone prospects and is not in the best interests of Stratasys and its shareholders,โ€ as Dow Jones Newswires reported at the time.

On Thursday, Nano Dimension said it was still determined to create a market leader in the additive manufacturing space.

โ€œAs we had previously indicated to the Stratasys Board, given their continued refusal to engage in negotiations, we have decided to present our offer directly to Stratasysโ€™ shareholders,โ€ said Yoav Stern, Nano Dimensionโ€™s chairman and CEO. โ€œWe believe our offer delivers certain all-cash value to Stratasysโ€™ shareholders at a premium in excess of what Stratasys can deliver to its shareholders.โ€

Stratasys shareholders have until June 26 to tender their shares into the offer.

Stratasys and Burlington, Mass.-based Desktop Metal, meanwhile, said their planned combination would create a company that would target $1.1 billion in 2025 revenue.

โ€œThe combination of these two great companies marks a turning point in driving the next phase of additive manufacturing for mass production,โ€ Ric Fulop, chief executive of Burlington, Mass.-based Desktop Metal, said in a statement. The two companies are active in the aerospace, automotive, consumer products, healthcare and dental sectors.

ย Under the terms of the board-approved deal, Desktop Metal shareholders would receive 0.123 shares of Stratasys for each share owned, equal to about $1.88 per share.

Once the deal closes โ€” which was expected to happen in the fourth quarter โ€” Stratasys shareholders would own 59% of the new company, while Desktop shareholders would own the remaining 41%.

Both companies reaffirmed guidance for 2023 offered with their first-quarter earnings.ย 

All three stocks moved lower in Thursday trade. Stratasys was down 2.5%. Desktop Metal was down 4.9% and Nano Dimension was down 0.8%.

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