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3D Printing, Cathie Wood’s Latest Disaster

Wall Street Millennial | April 20, 2026



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In this video we analyze the 3D printing industry, specifically in the context of Ark Invest’s bullish projections.

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#Wallstreetmillennial #3dprinting

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0:00 – 2:36 Intro
2:37 – 6:11 Consumer Hype Cycle
6:12 – 10:55 Industrial Hype Cycle
10:56 Hype Meets Reality

Written by Wall Street Millennial

Comments

This post currently has 36 comments.

  1. @randywatson8347

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Well I can say I got a small Chinese one for 200 buks 3 years ago and it works out of the box.
    The irony is that plastic 3D printing is a cheaper option to make moulds for moulds.
    We know Ark is a dumb shilling company throwing with buzzwords (everything related to Musk).
    From a metal engineering perspective they are creating a problem that does not exist.
    There are reasons why metal parts don't have detailed parts and are designed in multiparts for structural integrity and servicability.

  2. @boarpsimson8675

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    listening to apparent "Professionals" seriously state they think 3D printers will never be a common household appliance is absurd. never? in a world where mass-produced plastics are causing environmental damage, a device that could make a simple plastic object such as a batch of plastic tupperware containers would be invaluable. consumer printers regularly use biodegradable plastics like PLA, its very likely food-safe filament plastics will enter the market in the next decade or two. to put it simply, there is a far, far, far greater likelihood of 3d printers being found in say 1 in 3 homes by 2050 than there is of humans successfully colonising Mars in the same period.

  3. @thinktankindi1972

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Mold is only one of many methods of metal fabrication. Worked in business for over 30 years. We have had our eye on additive manufacturing for at least 15 years…evaluating the tech to see if it is viable for utilizing. The tech is far away from replacing traditional metal fabrication methods. We do utilize it for prototypes though…but not real world output. The current output is costly per unit and does not accommodate customer metalurgical specifications when tested.

  4. @falcon-eu1wu

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    I do not own a 3d printer, but I am proficient in there use and 3d modelling software. I learned 3d modelling on my own for making mods for various games. I Learned how to work with 3d printers because of my high school science labs getting them via a grant and no one else knowing how to use them so I was just given one to play with and I figured it out. Just wanted to say something since you were talking about the knowledge and skills to 3d print at the beginning of the video

  5. @notsam498

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Both Kathy Wood and Wall Street millennial have no clue what they are talking about on this topic. AND the 3 companies he is listing are not the real players in the market. AND he is severely wrong about some methods logistics, for instance the negation of DED and WAAM.
    From a technical standpoint I would give this video a 3/10 and say he completely missed the bus.

    I'm a materials engineer
    I am an avid 3d printing hobbiest and have built almost a dozen 3d printers. I also have experience with metal 3d printing technology.
    I think 3d printing will never gain mainstream appeal. It is really useful to makers and engineers, in almost every material type. It is however largely used by the bulk of the community to make wasteful trinkets.

    That said it is a revolutionary technology for some engineering applications. Especially, aerospace, nuclear engineering, healthcare and high end automotive. It is also extremely powerful for prototyping and building bespoke project solutions. I have personally used it for research purposes a lot and it is a game changer in a laboratory.

    All this to say 3d printing is a revolution in materials science that will be happening for the next 25 years at least. At the same time, it is not for everyone and does not belong in every home, and it isn't going to be resulting in any mega profitable corporations.

  6. @btoiscool

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Your description on how metal is processed isn't correct in that all you are describing is casting, which isn't the comparative thing when looking at cost reductions (although there is less waste in printing a metal part via SLM technologies, which is also not the only metal AM technology, compared to casting). That is compared to machining, which not only reduces waste going with an AM route, uses far less complicated tooling for higher complexity designs. wax solutions to create voids for instance is unnecessary in an AM solution because you can directly print the voids into the shape. This means that you no longer need to form, melt out, braise, etc. those voids together.

    If you want to compare casting to metal AM, casting has the limitation of mold design. Not only are molds expensive to make, they are often considered long term consumables unless the mold in question has delicate components within it (channels for fluid passage within the component for instance). Due to the small feature size and required tolerance, this will vastly reduce the mold lifespan. On top of this, casting is even worse than machining for complexity cost penalties. A mold can then easily end up costing as much as the AM machine and several months of operation alone.

    Casting also has the issue of needing lots of energy to actually work. You're dealing with liquid metals to be able to cast, and as such, you have to heat up a bunch of metal to high temps. This is a much higher cost than doing localized sintering.

  7. @garym2282

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Woods, Musk and Trump all run similar cons. Overload your grift with grandiose promises, hit on one, fail on 99. Focus on the one win and pretend the other 99 never existed! Rinse and repeat!

  8. @debasishraychawdhuri

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    I think 3D printing failed to productize the thing properly. They expected everyone to suddenly grow into engineers who understand material strength and how to use CAD. Actually going to the store is easier.

  9. @commonsense7754

    April 20, 2026 at 2:02 am

    Nearly everything you state about the current consumer 3d printer market was incorrect. Cokauker printers like Bambu are largely plug and play devices and the software could be driven by a 6 year old. No need to design anything for most with billions of files available online. The reference to bad quality and limited/expensive filament types is also totally incorrect

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