Just days ago, the bell rang at the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) for Creality. The company opened at HK$33.80 per share, up from the IPO price of HK$18.8, giving it a market capitalization approaching HK$16 billion. Demand was remarkable. The Hong Kong public offering was oversubscribed 3,829 times, the international offering nearly 27 times, and cornerstone investors subscribed to nearly half of the shares offered.
Many people interpret this as “just another 3D printing company going public.” But after reviewing the prospectus, industry data, and global market trends, it becomes clear that the real significance of Creality’s IPO is not the listing itself, but that China’s consumer 3D printing industry has entered a new phase of global competition.
From Creality, I see a clear strategic vision — but also some critical concerns that cannot be ignored.

Creality IPO on the HKSE. Image courtesy of Li Haixiong/Nanjixiong 3D Printing.
A “Platform Empire” Taking Shape
Creality has an undisputed dominant position in the global consumer 3D printing market. In 2025, its printer gross merchandise value (GMV) ranked second globally (11.2% share), its scanner GMV ranked first (45.3%), and its laser engraver business also placed among the top four categories.
Beyond hardware sales, Creality is increasingly positioning itself as a platform company. And this may be the most important part of Creality’s long-term strategy. Creality doesn’t just want to sell machines; it aims to build an ecosystem. Creality Cloud has over 5.7 million registered users and 2.7 million 3D models, numbers that are highly competitive in the industry. This is the core asset that enables its transition from “selling hardware” to “building a platform” and explains the higher valuation the capital market is willing to give.
The company’s reach is also remarkably global. Its business now operates in more than 140 countries and regions. The US market alone contributes nearly 30% of revenue (28.4%), with North America and Europe together accounting for over 57%. This was not built through OEM manufacturing alone. It represents a genuine global presence under the Creality brand. Very few Chinese consumer 3D printing brands have achieved this depth of penetration.
The supply chain serves as the ballast stone behind Creality’s growth. The company operates three major production bases in Wuhan, Huizhou, and Shenzhen, totaling more than 260,000 square meters. This is a classic example of the “Shenzhen model” dividend: extreme cost control, rapid iteration, and remarkable speed of distribution. This manufacturing muscle is something many competitors cannot replicate.
AI is not a gimmick — it is becoming embedded in the DNA of the company’s product lineup. From AI-assisted modeling (text-to-image, image-to-3D) to in-print AI leveling, flow calibration, fault detection, and AI-driven path planning for laser engraving, AI has permeated the entire product workflow. This gives Creality a strong position in the “AI + manufacturing” narrative.
Deeper Signals Hidden in Creality’s Data
Beneath the glossy numbers lie several signals worth examining more closely. The “revenue without profit” scissors gap. Revenue grew strongly from RMB 1.88 billion in 2023 to RMB 3.13 billion in 2025. However, operating profit fell from RMB 177 million in 2023 to an operating loss of RMB 198 million in 2025. Although the net loss in 2025 was largely due to a one‑time payment of RMB 240 million to pre‑IPO investors, even excluding that, adjusted net profit dropped from RMB 130 million in 2023 to RMB 92 million in 2025.
So, where did the money go? Two places: sales and marketing, and R&D. The sales expense ratio jumped from 16.0% to 18.2%, with absolute spending rising from RMB 300 million to RMB 570 million. The extra spending went mostly toward platform promotions, such as Amazon and overseas KOLs. Competition is so fierce that without paying for traffic, orders become harder and harder to secure.
The R&D expense ratio rose from 5.1% to 7.1%, nearly doubling in absolute terms. This is necessary spending to avoid falling behind in a rapidly evolving market, but it also squeezes profits.
The competitive picture becomes clearer in the prospectus itself. The filing states that the largest market participant holds more than 40% market share, while the remaining top five each hold about 10%. That “largest participant” is widely understood to be Bambu Lab.
Creality’s own global printer GMV share fell from 15.4% in 2023 to 11.2% in 2025. Who has taken that share is obvious. Industry observers would likely point to Bambu Lab as one of the major beneficiaries of that shift. Creality’s response strategy appears clear: first, product premiumization through higher-end systems such as the K2 Plus, which helped raise the average printer selling price from RMB 1,612 to RMB 2,404; and second, expansion of direct sales channels, with online sales rising from 35.7% to 48.5% of total sales. This is a head-on confrontation rather than a passive defense.
Despite the impressive number of users, the ecosystem still contributes very little revenue. Creality Cloud’s user and model numbers look impressive, but the revenue contribution is negligible. In 2025, revenue from “3D printing products and services” (mainly platform subscriptions, model transaction commissions, and related services) totaled just RMB 6.28 million, representing only 0.2% of total revenue.
The “ecosystem” is currently more of a powerful user-engagement and brand moat than a mature revenue source. The newly launched Nexbie platform is still in its early days and essentially functions primarily as a self-operated e-commerce site.
Another figure worth watching is operating cash flow. In 2025, operating cash flow was negative RMB 63.98 million. This is one of the figures that stands out most in the company’s filing. The explanation is straightforward. To prepare for US tariffs and intensifying competition, the company built up overseas warehouse inventory levels, causing inventory to surge from RMB 438 million to RMB 634 million and tying up huge amounts of working capital.
Behind this is a typical aggressive strategy of “exchanging cash flow for market share.” Whether that approach remains sustainable under the more rigorous financial scrutiny that comes with being a public company is a major unknown.

Creality’s IPO. Image courtesy of Creality via LinkedIn.
Four Challenges Ahead
Based on all publicly available information, I believe Creality’s future is bright, but it must overcome four deep challenges.
An asymmetric war with Bambu Lab
This is not just a battle for market share — it’s a clash of two business models. Bambu Lab follows what could be described as an “Apple‑style play,” defining the industry ceiling with one or two exceptional products, locking in core users through the MakerWorld ecosystem, and building high barriers around the user experience. It attacks from the top down.
Creality, by contrast, follows more of an “Android‑style play.” It relies on a broad product matrix and a deep distribution network to cover every price segment and serve different types of users. It attacks from the wide base upward.
The question is whether “width” can withstand “sharpness.” As more users are drawn to Bambu Lab’s “foolproof” user experience, how much of Creality’s large mid- to low-end installed base could be eroded? And can the K2 series truly compete with Bambu Lab’s flagship systems in technology, reliability, and user experience while establishing a genuine premium brand position?
Squeeze on profitability and cash flow from both ends
The company also faces what could be described as a “sandwich” dilemma. Moving upmarket needs sustained investment in R&D, while defending market share needs sustained heavy marketing spending. At the same time, managing tariff-related risks has forced the company to maintain higher overseas inventory levels, tying up cash flow.
The result is that revenue continues to grow, but profitability and cash generation face increasing pressure and could turn negative. If revenue growth slows while expenses remain elevated, profitability will be severely challenged. Sustained negative operating cash flow is not an attractive signal for a newly public company.
The long wait for ecosystem monetization
The platform and ecosystem are the core story behind Creality’s high valuation, but they won’t contribute meaningful revenue in the short term. Platform development, content incentives, and AI R&D all require continuous “cash burning.”
The question is whether investors will remain patient enough to wait for that strategy to mature. If market conditions weaken over the next several years and investors shift their focus toward profitability and cash flow, the ecosystem narrative could become harder to sustain and may weigh on the stock price.
Over‑reliance on the US market
Nearly 30% of Creality’s revenue comes from the United States, a market that currently faces several challenges. Combined tariffs now range from roughly 40% to 50%, significantly eroding price competitiveness. The future direction of U.S.-China trade relations remains uncertain, while local competition continues to intensify, with Bambu Lab maintaining a strong position in the market.
This creates a high‑reward, high‑risk gamble. Any major volatility in the US market (whether due to additional tariffs, trade restrictions, or an anti‑dumping investigation) could affect Creality’s revenue and profitability. While the company is exploring manufacturing in Vietnam, it is unlikely to provide an immediate solution.

Creality’s IPO. Image courtesy of Creality via LinkedIn.
Creality is an excellent company with strong partners. It has successfully navigated the journey from 0 to 1 in consumer 3D printing, building impressive supply chain, distribution, and execution capabilities along the way. Its listing on the HKSE is a well-deserved milestone.
But standing at this 2026 juncture, the challenges ahead may be even greater than those it has already overcome. Transitioning from a successful hardware company to a successful platform company requires crossing a vast chasm. The competition with Bambu Lab, the test of profitability models, the long cycle of ecosystem monetization, and over-reliance on a single market represent the four major risks that could shape the company’s future.
In the short term, the key question is competition. In the medium term, it is profitability. In the long term, it is the ecosystem. Creality’s future depends not only on how good its products are or how wide its distribution network becomes, but also on whether it can find a breakthrough in this “battle of the century” that may help determine the future shape of the consumer 3D printing industry landscape. Ultimately, the goal is not simply to sell more machines, but to convert a massive global user base into sustainable long-term commercial value. The road ahead will certainly not be smooth, but I must extend my congratulations to Creality for its successful listing on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange!

Xu Fanglei
About the Author
Xu Fanglei is an industrial designer, entrepreneur, and industry commentator focused on additive manufacturing and digital fabrication. He is the founder of SCRAT3D and 3D Printing Technology, one of China’s emerging media platforms covering the global 3D printing industry. Over the past decade, Xu has worked across industrial design, product innovation, and advanced manufacturing, while building connections between designers, manufacturers, researchers, and technology companies. His work explores the impact of 3D printing on manufacturing, education, consumer products, and entrepreneurship. Xu regularly publishes industry analysis and interviews, with a particular focus on developments within China’s rapidly growing additive manufacturing sector.
























