Proto Labs - Earnings Call - Q1 2025
May 2, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $126.2M, up 4% sequentially and down 1.3% year over year; non-GAAP diluted EPS was $0.33, near the top of guidance, and GAAP diluted EPS was $0.15.
- Versus S&P Global consensus, PRLB delivered a beat on revenue ($126.2M vs $123.7M*) and non-GAAP EPS ($0.33 vs $0.292*), while EBITDA came in below consensus ($13.57M vs $16.47M*) — a mixed quality beat with lower EBITDA driven by higher OpEx and mix shift toward Network fulfillment (Values retrieved from S&P Global).
- Q2 2025 guidance: revenue $124–$132M; GAAP diluted EPS $0.11–$0.19; non-GAAP diluted EPS $0.30–$0.38; non-GAAP tax rate 25–27% — indicating modest YoY growth at the midpoint and flat-to-slightly down margins due to higher Network mix.
- Management emphasized accelerating production-led growth, strong cash generation (CFO $18.4M), and $20.9M share repurchases, citing agility amid evolving tariffs and supply chain dynamics as a potential tailwind and catalyst.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Production momentum and marketing traction: “Customers utilizing our combined offer grew more than 45%... revenue per customer in Q1 increased by 3% year-over-year” and production revenue “exceeded our expectations”.
- Sequential margin and cash generation improvement: non-GAAP gross margin rose 140 bps sequentially to 44.8%; cash from operations was $18.4M in Q1, reinforcing industry-leading cash flow.
- Network fulfillment growth and resiliency: Protolabs Network revenue rose to $26.3M; management highlighted adaptable AI-driven pricing/sourcing and diversified footprint to mitigate tariff/sourcing risks.
What Went Wrong
- Year-over-year decline and service-line pressure: revenue down 1.3% YoY; Injection Molding (-7.5% YoY) and 3D Printing (-6.4% YoY) declined amid macro headwinds and slower prototyping demand.
- EBITDA down YoY and below consensus: Q1 EBITDA was $13.57M vs consensus $16.47M*, reflecting higher incentive comp and demand generation spend and mix shift to Network.
- Non-GAAP operating margin compression YoY: non-GAAP operating margin fell to 7.4% from 9.5% a year ago; management noted margins Q1→Q2 likely flat-to-slightly down on higher Network mix.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Jason Frankman, Vice President and Corporate Controller. Thank you. You may begin.
Jason Frankman (VP and Corporate Controller)
Thank you, Shumali. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Proto Labs' First Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined today by Rob Bodor, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Dan Schumacher, Chief Financial Officer. This morning, Proto Labs issued a press release announcing its financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. The release is available on the company's website. In addition, a prepared slide presentation is available online at the web address provided in our press release. Our discussion today will include statements relating to future performance and expectations that are or may be considered forward-looking statements and subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations.
Please refer to our earnings press release and recent SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K, for information on certain risks that could cause actual outcomes to differ materially and adversely from any forward-looking statements made today. The results and guidance we will discuss include non-GAAP financial measures consistent with our past practice. Please refer to our press release and the accompanying slide presentation at the Investor Relations section of our company website for a complete reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results. Now I'll turn the call over to Rob Bodor. Rob?
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks, Jason. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter earnings call. We started the year strong, delivering revenue of $126 million, near the upper end of our guidance range. Profitability was solid as well, with earnings per share of $0.33, also near the top end of our expectations. We also delivered sequential gross margin expansion and strong free cash flow. While first quarter revenue was down slightly versus the prior year amidst macroeconomic headwinds and manufacturing contraction, we remained confident in our strategy and our commitment to driving growth for the full year. Our first quarter performance sets a solid foundation for growth in 2025 and demonstrates our ability to deliver on expectations in a volatile environment, reinforcing the resilience of our model. In addition, free cash flow during the quarter represented 14% of revenue, reflecting continued industry-leading profitability.
Because we believe in the strength of our model, we have continued to return capital to our shareholders by repurchasing our common stock, as Dan will discuss shortly. Shifting to an update on our strategic priorities, our hybrid model continues to yield positive outcomes and was successful once again. Customers utilizing our combined offer grew more than 45% over the trailing 12 months, and revenue per customer in Q1 increased by 3% year over year. We also continue to make significant progress in our initiatives to drive growth, as outlined last quarter. First, our marketing investments to further establish Proto Labs as a production manufacturer are gaining traction. Our new messaging is resonating within production buyer channels, reinforcing our brand positioning and expanding awareness.
At the start of this year, we made an incremental investment in marketing to inform and educate potential customers about our expanded capabilities across the product lifecycle. We have seen our share of voice in the market increase as a result of this new marketing, with over 2 million views of our prototype-to-production campaign to date. This has led to an increase in searches for Proto Labs as potential customers look to source their custom on-demand manufacturing. Online searches for Proto Labs are up double-digit percentage points versus last year, and this progressively increased each month during the first quarter. We are seeing accelerated momentum for our production offerings. We will continue to invest in this campaign as we progress through 2025, tailoring to our target industries. Production revenue continued to grow nicely and exceeded our expectations in the first quarter.
We are very pleased with customer engagement of our expanded production capabilities. To illustrate our success in production applications, I'd like to highlight some customer examples in aerospace and defense, one of our target industries. Our speed, extensive domestic manufacturing capabilities, and ability to produce complex high-requirement parts make us an excellent partner to these innovative organizations. We offer ITAR-certified parts through both the factory and through the manufacturing partners in the Proto Labs Network, enabling aerospace and defense customers full access to our combined offer. Revenue from these customers has increased very nicely in recent years, in part due to increased end-user production orders. We manufacture flight-ready production parts through AS9100-certified facilities, and our metal 3D Printing service is especially valuable as customers seek to design and procure durable, lightweight parts.
We serve the largest and most advanced companies in this space, including 100% of aerospace and defense companies in the Fortune 500. Organizations like Blue Origin, NASA, and Lockheed Martin have all leveraged production at Proto Labs. In one example, Proto Labs is part of a team supporting Blue Origin's Blue Moon Mark 1. The single-launch lunar cargo lander will remain on the moon's surface, providing safe, reliable, and affordable access to the lunar environment. NASA has said that the Mark 1 cargo lander could deliver a scientific payload to the moon's South Polar region as soon as this summer. We've also had several aero and defense customers qualify our production solution after auditing our manufacturing facilities. These customers, some of which have used our prototyping services for many years, have already placed orders for production parts in injection molding, CNC machining, and 3D printing.
This is a great example of continued growth driven by existing Proto Labs customers leveraging both prototyping and production. Now transitioning to our second initiative to drive growth, our go-to-market reorganization. I am pleased to say that this is yielding positive results. Enhanced sales enablement tools and processes are improving our understanding of customer production needs, enabling us to deliver tailored solutions via team-based selling, better serving our customers and driving growth. Third, the optimization of our fulfillment channels to meet customer needs is advancing very well. The closure of our German molding facility has streamlined our global operations as we continue to improve overall efficiency by aligning our manufacturing footprint with our global fulfillment strategy.
This decision, which is part of the broader multi-year reshaping of our portfolio and began with the closure of our Japan operations in 2022, allows us to better leverage both factory and network capabilities. We are pleased with the results to date and remain focused on continuing to optimize our manufacturing footprint to better serve our customers globally. Turning to tariffs and strategic positioning, we are closely monitoring the evolving tariff policies and their potential impact on our customers and the broader manufacturing landscape. As we've demonstrated, most recently during the COVID-19 pandemic, we can adapt faster than anyone to support our customers in times of supply and demand volatility. Speed and agility are central to our operations. While there is still uncertainty in regard to tariffs, we believe the current situation unfolding is a strong opportunity to drive growth for several reasons.
First, our diverse and strategically located global manufacturing footprint provides resilience and flexibility, allowing us to adapt to shifting supply chain dynamics and serve our customers effectively regardless of geographical shifts. In fact, 90% of our revenue from American customers is already fulfilled by factories in the U.S. through both our digital factories and our network. Our international operations are also highly adaptable. With manufacturing capabilities spanning multiple countries, we are not overly reliant on any single region and can and do shift capacity in response to changing demand. This positions us favorably as companies reevaluate sourcing strategies in response to tariff risks. Next, our pricing models are fulfilled and routing platforms are highly adaptable and driven by Artificial Intelligence. Finally, we consistently generate strong free cash flow, underscoring the fundamental strength of our business model.
This financial stability, which is uncommon in our industry, enables us to invest in growth initiatives and navigate periods of uncertainty. We are actively reviewing pricing strategies to help offset impacts from tariffs where appropriate, ensuring that we stay competitive while preserving value for customers. The current economic uncertainty is causing customers to be more cautious about demand forecasting, which makes them the timeline for shifting supply chains. Again, we believe this environment favors agile players like us. We pioneered on-demand manufacturing over 25 years ago, and we remain the fastest in the world. This is a vital solution for customers whose demand may be volatile or unclear, allowing them to only order what they need and receive delivery in days, not months. Before I hand the call over to Dan, I'd like to close with our 2025 priorities.
Our primary focus for 2025 remains driving growth in our key indicators, which are increasing the number of customers utilizing our combined offer and increasing revenue per customer. To achieve this, we are, 1) leveraging our newly streamlined organizational structure to enhance efficiency and accelerate growth across all areas of our business. Our teams are in place, and they are properly incentivized. 2) we are expanding our production use cases by investing in advanced manufacturing capabilities and refining our go-to-market strategies to better meet customers where they are, positioning ourselves to capture a larger share of this growing market. 3) we're reinforcing our core prototyping business by investing in cutting-edge technologies and optimizing lead times, ensuring we maintain our industry-leading position. Proto Labs' unique combination of factory and network enables us to serve customers across product lifecycles, from prototyping through production and into end-of-life.
In closing, we are confident in our position to navigate evolving market dynamics and deliver sustainable growth while maintaining industry-leading profitability and cash flow. Our strategic investments and operational efficiencies position us well to capitalize on emerging opportunities and create long-term value for our shareholders. Now I'll hand it over to Dan to cover the financials. Dan?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Thanks, Rob, and good morning, everyone. I'll start with a brief overview of our first quarter results, then provide our outlook for the second quarter of 2025. First quarter revenue came in at $126.2 million, toward the upper end of our guidance range, and down 1% year over year in constant currencies. The first quarter last year included one extra ordering day due to leap year. Our revenue result reflects a 4% sequential increase. Revenue fulfilled through Proto Labs Network was $26.3 million, up 11.5% in constant currencies. U.S. revenue was down 1.2% compared to the prior year. In Europe, revenue was flat compared to the prior year in constant currencies. Turning to Revenue by Service on a constant currency basis, CNC Machining revenue grew 6% year over year, driven by strong performance in production and high-requirement CNC parts.
Injection molding revenue declined 7% versus the prior year, mainly due to non-recurring larger part orders in the first quarter of 2024. Injection molding revenue increased 7% as compared to the fourth quarter. 3D printing revenue was down 6% year over year as order trends lagged our expectations in late 2024 and early 2025. Lastly, sheet metal revenue increased 19% over last year, driven by improved offerings and go-to-market efforts. Moving to margins, first quarter consolidated non-GAAP gross margin increased 140 basis points sequentially to 44.8%, mainly due to higher volume and margin improvements on the factory side. On a year-over-year basis, gross margin was down 80 basis points, driven by lower volume and a higher mix of network-fulfilled revenue. Non-GAAP operating expenses increased $3.6 million sequentially in the most recent quarter, driven primarily by higher incentive compensation as well as additional investments in demand generation.
We discussed these gross investments last quarter, and Rob elaborated on the progress we've made. We will continue to monitor returns on these investments and adjust as necessary throughout the year. Higher incentive comp and demand gen spend was partially offset by lower headcount in the first quarter as we restructured teams as part of the new organizational structure. Non-GAAP earnings per share were $0.33, within our guidance range and down $0.05 sequentially. This sequential decline was primarily driven by increased operating expenses and a higher tax rate. As Rob mentioned, we continue to lead the digital manufacturing industry in terms of cash generation. We generated $18.4 million in cash from operations during the first quarter, and we returned $20.9 million to shareholders in the form of repurchases, or 122% of free cash flow.
On March 31, 2025, we had $116.3 million of cash and investments on our balance sheet and zero debt. Our outlook for the second quarter of 2025 is outlined on slide 15. We expect revenue between $124 million and $132 million. This guidance represents growth of 2% year over year at the midpoint and incorporates order and revenue trends to date. We expect foreign currency to have a $300,000 favorable impact on revenue compared to the second quarter of 2024. Moving to earnings guidance, we anticipate non-GAAP add-backs in the second quarter to include stock-based compensation expense of approximately $4.5 million and amortization expense of $900,000. We currently estimate a non-GAAP effective tax rate between 25%-27% in the second quarter. In summary, we expect second quarter non-GAAP earnings per share between $0.30 and $0.38. That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, open up for questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Brian Drab with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Brian Drab (Partner and Co-Group Head of Industrials)
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks, Brian.
Brian Drab (Partner and Co-Group Head of Industrials)
I will point out, it seems like maybe the start of a good trend here is seeing the Unique Customer Contacts up sequentially, the Revenue per Customer up sequentially. These are just a couple of things that, I mean, the Customer Count up just modestly sequentially, but moving in the right direction in a tough environment stood out to me. I wanted to ask first, on the gross margin, is it a nice improvement sequentially in gross margin? Obviously, the fourth quarter can be a little soft. Can you just drill into that a little bit more and how sustainable this level of gross margin is? Can you get back to some of these 45s and 46s that we saw in 2024 as we move through 2025?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Thanks for the question, Brian. It's primarily volume, quarter-over-quarter, and we had a good pickup in volume in our factory, which caused our factory margins to increase quarter-over-quarter. Our network margins actually were slightly down quarter-over-quarter. I think we've got some challenges usually in the first quarter from a network perspective as it relates to sourcing and Chinese New Year and so forth. The main driver quarter-over-quarter is that increase in factory volume and factory margins. As we look at the rest of the year, my guide implies that margins from Q1 to Q2 will be flat to slightly down. That's really the amount of revenue that we have flowing through network-fulfilled versus factory-fulfilled. We expect higher network revenue quarter-over-quarter, and that's going to create a headwind.
That being said, we are driving improvements in margin in both the factory and both the network. I think getting to 45 or some of those higher margins that we saw before, it will be impacted by how much of that volume does go through the network versus what goes through the factory as we look at the rest of the year.
Brian Drab (Partner and Co-Group Head of Industrials)
Okay, thanks.
Operator (participant)
Yeah, thanks.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Go ahead, Rob.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Sorry. Thank you for your comments on the business and the sequential performance. I'm quite pleased with that 4% sequential performance, and as our guide indicates, we're seeing continued growth and expect that growth to continue into Q2. We made major changes and a pretty substantial pivot last year in support of customer focus and in support of our production strategy. I'm very pleased with the growth that we're seeing in our production business as a result of this. At that time, we came forward with a number of critical metrics that we're going to use to measure this. Frankly, they're all up. We're seeing average order values increase. We're seeing revenue per customer increase. We're seeing the number of customers who are buying our combined offer up substantially, and our production revenues are growing.
I want to just recognize the work of our go-to-market teams who are out there educating our customers on this. This is our focus. We're investing behind it. We've got a successful brand campaign that we'll continue to drive, and I'm very encouraged with how we're starting this year.
Brian Drab (Partner and Co-Group Head of Industrials)
Got it. Maybe I'll just ask one more for now, since you guys just gave me a lot of detail on my first question. Is there anything to be concerned about related to the hub's network? I know that it's a global network, obviously, but I think there are quite a few manufacturing partners in China. Is the tariff situation, which I know could be a positive driving onshoring and be a positive for you in a lot of ways, is this trade war causing challenges for hubs?
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thank you for the question. No, we really have not seen that. We have got a network that is extremely adaptable. We routinely are able to, and on a real-time basis, move work around across the network and redirect orders based on the customer needs, pricing, and so forth. That flexibility really allows us to adapt very quickly. In fact, even in a normal year, we see substantial shifts across the network in terms of where we are sourcing components. That is what we have been able to do here to adapt to the tariffs. The network continues to grow, and we have been able to be quite flexible and adaptive to mitigate any impact both to our MPs and to our customers during this period. In fact, this is one of the strengths of our model.
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Thanks. I'm sorry to slip back to old terminology. I'll go write down Proto Labs Network 10 times on a piece of paper. It's the right name. All right, thanks.
Brian Drab (Partner and Co-Group Head of Industrials)
Thanks, Brian.
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Greg Palm with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please proceed with your question.
Greg Palm (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on the quarterly results. Can you maybe talk a little bit more about what you're seeing in April, specifically just in terms of kind of order growth and customer behavior? Specifically, the guide implies a lower gross margin. I think, Dan, you mentioned it's based on a mixed network. So you're seeing a higher proportion of revenue going in the network so far this month or previous month, April?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Yeah, from a trend perspective, we've seen orders consistently improve month to month as we've gone through the year. I think on the network side, it was, to start the year, softer and had to do more with kind of bigger network orders through Europe. We are seeing that begin to overall network-fulfilled orders to continue to trend up. Our guide reflects that. We just continue to see, as we're going through the year, improvement in demand.
Greg Palm (Senior Research Analyst)
You talked about the benefits of your offering, comprehensive offering in times like this. I'm curious, do you have any evidence that this current environment is actually providing some kind of tailwind, whether that's onboarding of new customers? I mean, I don't know what kind of metrics you'd look for specifically, but what are you seeing out there?
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Yeah, sure. Yeah. As I'm talking to customers, and I talked to several very recently, even this week, what we're hearing from them is several things. First of all, excitement around our production offerings and more adoption of those production offerings. This is independent of the macro environment. Remember that they've been asking us for these capabilities for years, and now we're really bringing them to them, and we're promoting it very aggressively. We've got these customers who we're engaging with. They're used to relying on us for their prototyping, and now we've got these production solutions so they can stay with us through their product lifecycle, reducing their risk whenever they have to change a supplier. That makes this more streamlined and more cost-effective for them.
They're very pleased with that, and I think that I attribute a lot of our sequential growth and what we're seeing today to that. That said, in terms of supply chain disruption and tariffs in this environment, we're definitely hearing them talk about looking at alternatives for their supply chain and diversification around supply chain and including reshoring to the U.S. as part of that solution. We're having those dialogues, and we're seeing some of them begin that. I see that again as a strong growth opportunity for us. I mean, we stand ready to serve their needs in that way. We're super adaptive. We're highly automated. We're very flexible, and we've got tons of scale. The supermajority 90% of our Americas revenue is already fulfilled in the Americas. We have very little tariff exposure from that standpoint.
Greg Palm (Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. I guess just kind of going forward, thinking about the network, are you just given some of the initial tariffs, are you thinking about building a greater base, let's say, here in the U.S.? I mean, do you feel like you've got the right amount of production partners here? What do you think?
Robert Bodor (CEO)
I'm pleased with our network and the strong manufacturing partners that we have in all parts of the world. We've got plenty of excess capacity right now in our U.S. manufacturing partners. Of course, as we grow and scale, we can onboard and do routinely onboard more. I feel very ready right now. I think we've got the right network, the right set of partners, and we are ready to grow.
Greg Palm (Senior Research Analyst)
All right. Best of luck. I'll leave it there. Thanks.
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Thanks, Brian.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Troy Jensen with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed with your question.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Hey, gentlemen. Congrats on the much better results.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks, Brian.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Rob, maybe to start with you. You're welcome. Rob, to start with you, just on the push into production, if you guys are successful, will you see it more in factory or network? The reason I'm asking, I guess I always thought it'd be more on the factory side because I think customers are going to want to qualify the partner that they're working with, and you guys can control the quality better in the factory versus the network. It seems like you're talking up network as the benefit of tariffs or production, excuse me.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks for the question, Troy. The answer is definitely both. We serve customers with production and end-use parts out of both our factories and our networks. Actually, quite pleased with the quality that comes out of the network partners. This is an area of strength in our model, and we aggressively audit and control quality with our network partners just as we do within our own factories. We have the same quality standards that we apply across our whole organization. Remember, now we've got a global operations organization that includes both factory and network. We view that in the same way and hold it to those same standards.
The answer varies a little bit more as we think about it by service where some services we're going to do more likely more production out of the factory and in others more in the network. We definitely see it across the board.
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Troy, I think one other thing to remind you, we think how our network is set up is well-positioned to do more production-type work. We have a more discrete defined base of manufacturing partners that we work with. We're making sure that we are in contact with our cross-stocks and the MPs to make sure that the quality of the parts that are coming through is high and that there's more interaction that a customer can have through some of our digital tools in order to do those production-type orders through the network. I'm going to reinforce what Rob said. It's a both. It is both production through the factory and production through the network.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Okay, perfect. Thanks.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
As we're seeing production grow, that's how it's playing out.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Perfect. Just a follow up for you. I mean, it's been a while since we've had a normal year. Can you remind us normal seasonality? I always think of Q3 traditionally up sequentially and then Q4 down. Is that the case? Are tariffs going to maybe offset that, provide growth throughout the year?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Troy, I have to laugh when you say what a normal year is because, it's been a while. I mean, normally what we end up seeing is Q1, although being up from Q4, is a little bit softer because of coming out of the holidays, that January would be softer from a revenue perspective. We see kind of that pickup quarter-to-quarter, which is mainly due to having kind of three months rather than that. We see maybe flattish as you go Q2 to Q3, if not slightly up, and it would be down in the fourth quarter really due to the holidays again. That's usually what we see. Q1 up versus fourth quarter, slightly down versus Q2. Q2 sees a pickup. Q3 flat to slightly up, and then slightly down for the Q4 due to the holidays.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Do you think tariffs are set this year?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Oh my God, Troy. As you said, we haven't had normal in a long time. I feel good about what our guide is for the second quarter, but it's a changing landscape. As Rob said, I mean, we really feel that we're well-positioned both from the number of different fulfillment options we can offer customers as well as our financial strength.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
And the actions that we're taking are gaining traction.
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Yep.
Troy Jensen (Managing Director)
Perfect. Thanks, guys, and good luck going forward.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of James Ricchiuti with Needham & Company. Please proceed with your question.
James Ricchiuti (Senior Analyst)
Hi, good morning. I may have missed it. It may be in your material or you may have said it. What were the network margins in the quarter? I think you said they were down quarter-on-quarter, but did you say what they were?
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
We didn't specifically say what the margins were, but they were a little over 31% for the network.
James Ricchiuti (Senior Analyst)
Terrific. Thank you. On tariffs, I think I'm trying to get a sense. Are you seeing headwinds at all from the materials you use? It sounds like you're already evaluating pricing actions. I'm just curious if that's an issue for you at all.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks for the question, Jim. I think the strength of our model really helps us here. We've got a very robust supply chain for raw materials. We've been able to mitigate a lot of that and have not seen substantial increases in our costs from raw materials as a result of the tariff landscape.
James Ricchiuti (Senior Analyst)
Got it. You've had a couple of quarters of declines, I think, year over year in 3D printing. I'm wondering how that business aligns with the overall strategy of driving the production parts business. I mean, you alluded to the space market, which just seems like a natural for production and metals outlook. I'm just wondering, is there anything we need to be thinking about as you look at that 3D printing portion of the business?
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks, Jim. I think you're thinking about it right. 3D printing is certainly, we do a bunch of production in 3D printing, but still the majority of that service is really a prototyping service. In the macro economy that we've been experiencing for the last two years now with manufacturing contraction, what we're hearing from customers is that they're not launching as many new products in this environment. They're slower to do that. We are seeing headwinds to prototyping overall. That was the reason why we drove the big pivot that we did in order to focus on production. We're seeing very nice growth in production pretty well across the board, including in the 3D printing segments that tie to production. Right now, in this economy, there's definitely a headwind for prototyping, and I think that's affecting our 3D printing business.
James Ricchiuti (Senior Analyst)
Got it. Last question. If we think about the production parts opportunity, there's some more mature manufacturing markets that you guys obviously are going after. I'm wondering, there's probably some ingrained culture using traditional methods. Are you satisfied with how the strategy is playing out in those markets? Obviously, some of the more nimble markets like commercial space, there's clear I would think there's good momentum there.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thanks. What we're seeing is that we've got a very differentiated offering that competes really well in the higher margin portions of the production landscape that we target. Those are the low to mid-volume production kinds of parts of the space. Because of our high levels of automation, digitalization, scalability, flexibility, we're pretty uniquely positioned in production in those categories. Those are kind of the higher margin categories. We like that. Certainly, by industry, where we tend to penetrate fastest is in those industries where they're launching more new products because that's where we get to be at the table. When they're launching the new product and they're developing the supply chain to produce that product, that's where we have great opportunities. I think that's why you're seeing that.
Over time, I fully expect us to be penetrating through production well in all the industries because we've really got a differentiated production offering in the parts of the industry that we're targeting.
James Ricchiuti (Senior Analyst)
Thanks, guys. Congrats.
Robert Bodor (CEO)
Thank you.
Dan Schumacher (CFO)
Thanks, Jim.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question and answer session. This does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. We thank you for your participation.