Marketdash

Laser Cutter Maker xTool Files for Hong Kong IPO Despite Core Product Sales Decline

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
The Tencent-backed company controls nearly half the global laser engraver market and boasts impressive margins from its direct-to-consumer model, but investors will need to look past a concerning drop in unit sales of its flagship products.

Most tech companies going public talk about their cutting-edge innovation. xTool Innovate Ltd. actually makes cutting-edge tools—literally. The company filed for a Hong Kong Stock Exchange listing on New Year's Day, positioning itself as one of the world's leading makers of laser cutters and engravers.

Think of xTool's products as cousins to 3D printers, but instead of building things layer by layer, they carve and engrave materials with laser precision. It's a niche market, sure, but xTool claims to dominate it with a commanding 47% global market share. And unlike many IPO hopefuls burning through cash, this company is actually profitable and sitting on a healthy pile of money.

The backing roster reads like a who's who of major players. Internet behemoth Tencent (TCEHY) and HongShan (formerly Sequoia China) are among the investors, while Morgan Stanley serves as a lead underwriter. That kind of firepower suggests serious interest from international investors, which makes sense given that roughly 85% of xTool's revenue comes from the U.S. and Europe rather than China.

The Cash Position Looks Solid

Here's what separates xTool from the typical cash-starved IPO candidate: the company had 1.14 billion yuan ($163 million) in cash at the end of September, already double the 569 million yuan it held a year earlier. Then it raised another $200 million in a Tencent-led funding round at the end of the year. So we're talking about a company that's flush with over $360 million and doesn't desperately need to go public just to keep the lights on.

The real story behind xTool's financial health lies in its distribution strategy. The company sells most of its products directly to consumers and small businesses, which lets it pocket margins that would otherwise go to middlemen. Its gross margin hit 56% in the first nine months of 2025, compared with 46.6% for Swiss competitor Bystronic and just 32.1% for China-based Han's Laser.

About 61% of xTool's sales came through its own websites in the first nine months of last year, up from 53% in 2023. Third-party e-commerce platforms like Amazon accounted for only 21% of sales, down from 32% in 2023. The shift shows the company is successfully building direct relationships with customers, which both improves margins and creates stickier customer relationships.

Building a Creative Community

xTool has also developed an interesting angle through its Atomm online community, which allows users to open their individual studios and homes for live product demonstrations. "These community-led spaces serve as local hubs of creativity and education, enhancing our brand image by turning users into user-hosts," the company explained in its listing document. It's the kind of word-of-mouth marketing that tech companies dream about, turning customers into evangelists who attract new buyers organically.

The company's products typically sell for between $1,000 and $1,800 on Amazon's U.S. site, where xTool has become one of the top-selling brands in its category. Founder Wang Jianjun, now 40, comes from an aircraft design background and started the company back in 2013. But he didn't hit on the laser cutter and engraver business until launching those first products in 2021, which means the company's explosive growth has happened in just a few years.

The Problem: Slowing Sales

Now for the concerning part. After revenue surged 70% in 2024 to 2.48 billion yuan from 1.46 billion yuan in 2023, growth hit a wall. In the first nine months of 2025, revenue grew just 19% year-over-year to 1.78 billion yuan from 1.5 billion yuan. That's a dramatic deceleration, likely pointing to intensifying competition in the space.

More worrisome: actual unit sales of xTool's laser-based personal creative tools and accessories fell to 71,900 units in the first nine months of 2025 from 85,900 units a year earlier. That's a drop of about 16% in core product volumes. The company managed to soften the revenue blow by raising prices and by launching a new line of laser printers last year. Management blamed the unit sales decline on product launch timing and the discontinuation of certain models, but that explanation doesn't exactly inspire confidence.

The U.S. market currently generates 55% of xTool's sales, down from 62% in 2023, showing the geographic mix is still evolving. This does create some exposure to potential U.S. tariffs on Chinese products, though xTool has some flexibility through a manufacturing facility in Thailand and relationships with third-party contract manufacturers that may be located offshore.

Valuation Questions

Despite the unit sales slump, xTool remained profitable with 83.1 million yuan in profit during the first nine months of 2025, up 58% from 52.6 million yuan in the year-ago period. The company also reached an important milestone when its total assets surpassed its total liabilities, giving it positive net assets for the first time.

Valuations in the laser cutting and engraving sector vary widely. Bystronic trades at a price-to-sales ratio of 0.79, while Han's Laser commands a 2.44 multiple. If xTool can achieve a ratio around 3—justified by its higher margins and dominant market position—that would value the company at roughly $1 billion, earning it official "unicorn" status.

The investment case comes down to this: xTool has built an impressive business with strong margins, genuine profitability, and a leading market position. The direct-to-consumer model and community-building efforts seem to be working. But potential investors will need convincing that the company can reignite growth in its core products rather than just papering over declining unit sales with price increases and new product launches. For a company seeking a premium valuation, falling sales of flagship products is exactly the kind of red flag that's hard to ignore.

Laser Cutter Maker xTool Files for Hong Kong IPO Despite Core Product Sales Decline

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
The Tencent-backed company controls nearly half the global laser engraver market and boasts impressive margins from its direct-to-consumer model, but investors will need to look past a concerning drop in unit sales of its flagship products.

Most tech companies going public talk about their cutting-edge innovation. xTool Innovate Ltd. actually makes cutting-edge tools—literally. The company filed for a Hong Kong Stock Exchange listing on New Year's Day, positioning itself as one of the world's leading makers of laser cutters and engravers.

Think of xTool's products as cousins to 3D printers, but instead of building things layer by layer, they carve and engrave materials with laser precision. It's a niche market, sure, but xTool claims to dominate it with a commanding 47% global market share. And unlike many IPO hopefuls burning through cash, this company is actually profitable and sitting on a healthy pile of money.

The backing roster reads like a who's who of major players. Internet behemoth Tencent (TCEHY) and HongShan (formerly Sequoia China) are among the investors, while Morgan Stanley serves as a lead underwriter. That kind of firepower suggests serious interest from international investors, which makes sense given that roughly 85% of xTool's revenue comes from the U.S. and Europe rather than China.

The Cash Position Looks Solid

Here's what separates xTool from the typical cash-starved IPO candidate: the company had 1.14 billion yuan ($163 million) in cash at the end of September, already double the 569 million yuan it held a year earlier. Then it raised another $200 million in a Tencent-led funding round at the end of the year. So we're talking about a company that's flush with over $360 million and doesn't desperately need to go public just to keep the lights on.

The real story behind xTool's financial health lies in its distribution strategy. The company sells most of its products directly to consumers and small businesses, which lets it pocket margins that would otherwise go to middlemen. Its gross margin hit 56% in the first nine months of 2025, compared with 46.6% for Swiss competitor Bystronic and just 32.1% for China-based Han's Laser.

About 61% of xTool's sales came through its own websites in the first nine months of last year, up from 53% in 2023. Third-party e-commerce platforms like Amazon accounted for only 21% of sales, down from 32% in 2023. The shift shows the company is successfully building direct relationships with customers, which both improves margins and creates stickier customer relationships.

Building a Creative Community

xTool has also developed an interesting angle through its Atomm online community, which allows users to open their individual studios and homes for live product demonstrations. "These community-led spaces serve as local hubs of creativity and education, enhancing our brand image by turning users into user-hosts," the company explained in its listing document. It's the kind of word-of-mouth marketing that tech companies dream about, turning customers into evangelists who attract new buyers organically.

The company's products typically sell for between $1,000 and $1,800 on Amazon's U.S. site, where xTool has become one of the top-selling brands in its category. Founder Wang Jianjun, now 40, comes from an aircraft design background and started the company back in 2013. But he didn't hit on the laser cutter and engraver business until launching those first products in 2021, which means the company's explosive growth has happened in just a few years.

The Problem: Slowing Sales

Now for the concerning part. After revenue surged 70% in 2024 to 2.48 billion yuan from 1.46 billion yuan in 2023, growth hit a wall. In the first nine months of 2025, revenue grew just 19% year-over-year to 1.78 billion yuan from 1.5 billion yuan. That's a dramatic deceleration, likely pointing to intensifying competition in the space.

More worrisome: actual unit sales of xTool's laser-based personal creative tools and accessories fell to 71,900 units in the first nine months of 2025 from 85,900 units a year earlier. That's a drop of about 16% in core product volumes. The company managed to soften the revenue blow by raising prices and by launching a new line of laser printers last year. Management blamed the unit sales decline on product launch timing and the discontinuation of certain models, but that explanation doesn't exactly inspire confidence.

The U.S. market currently generates 55% of xTool's sales, down from 62% in 2023, showing the geographic mix is still evolving. This does create some exposure to potential U.S. tariffs on Chinese products, though xTool has some flexibility through a manufacturing facility in Thailand and relationships with third-party contract manufacturers that may be located offshore.

Valuation Questions

Despite the unit sales slump, xTool remained profitable with 83.1 million yuan in profit during the first nine months of 2025, up 58% from 52.6 million yuan in the year-ago period. The company also reached an important milestone when its total assets surpassed its total liabilities, giving it positive net assets for the first time.

Valuations in the laser cutting and engraving sector vary widely. Bystronic trades at a price-to-sales ratio of 0.79, while Han's Laser commands a 2.44 multiple. If xTool can achieve a ratio around 3—justified by its higher margins and dominant market position—that would value the company at roughly $1 billion, earning it official "unicorn" status.

The investment case comes down to this: xTool has built an impressive business with strong margins, genuine profitability, and a leading market position. The direct-to-consumer model and community-building efforts seem to be working. But potential investors will need convincing that the company can reignite growth in its core products rather than just papering over declining unit sales with price increases and new product launches. For a company seeking a premium valuation, falling sales of flagship products is exactly the kind of red flag that's hard to ignore.