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3D Systems Releases Restated Financial Statements.


Reports 3rd Quarter 2006 Results

ROCK HILL, S.C. -- 3D Systems Corporation (NASDAQ NASDAQ
 in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations

U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on
: TDSC TDSC Thai Development Support Committee
TDSC Time Domain Signal Coding
TDSC Test Driver System - Charlie
TDSC Time-Domain Spreading Code
), a leading provider of Rapid 3-D Printing, Prototyping and Manufacturing solutions, released its restated financial statements for the first and second quarters of 2006 and prior periods today. Separately, the company also reported its operating results for the third quarter and first nine months of 2006. The company also filed its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q Form 10-Q

See 10-Q.
 for the quarter ended September 30, 2006 with the SEC today.

Restatement Restatement

A revision in a company's earlier financial statements.

Notes:
The need for restating financial figures can result from fraud, misrepresentation, or a simple clerical error.
 

As the company announced on December 14, 2006, it has restated its annual financial statements for its 2004 and 2005 calendar years. The effect of these restatements was to increase net income available to common stockholders in 2004 by $0.5 million, or $0.04 per share on a fully diluted di·lute  
tr.v. di·lut·ed, di·lut·ing, di·lutes
1. To make thinner or less concentrated by adding a liquid such as water.

2. To lessen the force, strength, purity, or brilliance of, especially by admixture.
 basis, and to decrease net income available to common stockholders in 2005 by $0.7 million, or $0.05 per share on a fully diluted basis. These amounts are consistent with the expectations that the company announced last month. Each quarterly period in 2005 was also restated, and the effect of those restatements has been included in the 2005 operating results discussed below.

The company has also restated its financial statements for the first two quarters of 2006. The effect of these restatements was to increase net loss available to common stockholders in the first quarter of 2006 by $0.7 million, or $0.05 per share, and to increase net loss available to common stockholders in the second quarter of 2006 by $2.6 million, or $0.16 per share. These amounts are also consistent with the expectations that the company announced last month.

As the company previously disclosed, it identified the errors that led to these restatements in the third quarter of 2006. These errors primarily include errors in recording customer credits and deposits and to a lesser extent (i) errors identified in reconciling fixed asset and construction-in-progress accounts and related depreciation and (ii) errors identified during the reconciliation of a number of income and expense accounts and accrued liabilities Accrued liabilities are liabilities which have occurred, but have not been paid or logged under accounts payable during an accounting period; in other words, obligations for goods and services provided to a company for which invoices have not yet been received. . As noted above, in the restatements, these errors primarily impacted the first and second quarters of 2006. Certain of the errors identified with respect to the 2004 and 2005 financial statements reflected the effect on those years of the 2006 errors that the company identified and the remainder of them primarily included unrelated previously unadjusted audit differences with respect to 2004 and 2005 that were evaluated when they were identified in prior periods and determined not to be material to the financial statements at that time. The company recorded these unadjusted differences in the restatement of the 2004 and 2005 financial statements.

The company identified the errors in the 2006 financial statements primarily as a result of its efforts to remediate re·me·di·a·tion  
n.
The act or process of correcting a fault or deficiency: remediation of a learning disability.



re·me
 the material weaknesses that it previously identified and disclosed with respect to its second quarter 2006 financial statements as well as through its ongoing efforts (a) to implement its new ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) An integrated information system that serves all departments within an enterprise. Evolving out of the manufacturing industry, ERP implies the use of packaged software rather than proprietary software written by or for one customer.  system, (b) to reconcile the records in its new ERP system and those in its legacy systems, and (c) to test its internal controls in the context of the new ERP system environment. In connection with restating its financial statements, the company identified additional material weaknesses that it is working to remediate. These material weaknesses, and the actions the company is taking diligently dil·i·gent  
adj.
Marked by persevering, painstaking effort. See Synonyms at busy.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin d
 to remediate them, are discussed in greater detail in the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q that the company filed with the SEC today.

The company encourages anyone who is interested in a detailed analysis of the restatement to read the company's Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2006.

Operating Results

In line with its December 14, 2006 announcement, the company reported revenue for the third quarter of 2006 of $31.5 million, a 2.2% decrease from restated revenue reported for the third quarter of 2005. Revenue for the first nine months of 2006 was $92.2 million, a 2.9% decrease from restated revenue reported for the first nine months of 2005. On a sequential-quarter basis, revenue increased by 16.0% over the company's second-quarter 2006 revenue, reflecting the early impact of the corrective action A corrective action is a change implemented to address a weakness identified in a management system. Normally corrective actions are instigated in response to a customer complaint, abnormal levels if internal nonconformity, nonconformities identified during an internal audit or  plan that the company began to implement in July 2006.

Gross profit for the third quarter of 2006 declined to $10.7 million from $14.7 million in the third quarter of 2005 as restated and declined to $30.2 million from $41.7 million in the first nine months of 2005 as restated.

Net loss available to common stockholders for the third quarter of 2006 was $11.3 million, or $0.61 per fully diluted share, compared to $0.5 million of net income available to common stockholders, or $0.03 per fully diluted share, in the 2005 quarter as restated. Net loss available to common stockholders for the first nine months of 2006 was $24.7 million, or $1.48 per fully diluted share, compared to $1.8 million of net income available to common stockholders, or $0.11 per fully diluted share, in the first nine months of 2005 as restated. These net losses in the 2006 periods included $2.5 million of non-cash income tax expense arising out of the recording of a valuation allowance at September 30, 2006 against the net deferred tax asset that the company recorded at December 31, 2005 as a result of the company's changed outlook.

Consistent with its December 14, 2006 announcement, the company's operating performance in the third quarter and first nine months of 2006 was largely a reflection of the disruptions that it encountered when it started up its new enterprise resource planning See ERP.

(application, business) Enterprise Resource Planning - (ERP) Any software system designed to support and automate the business processes of medium and large businesses.
 ("ERP") system in the U.S. and in most of Europe during the second quarter of 2006, many of which continued to have an adverse effect on its operations in the third quarter of 2006 with lessening impact as the third quarter ended. These disruptions, as well as other interruptions in its supply chain activities arising primarily from the outsourcing (1) Contracting with outside consultants, software houses or service bureaus to perform systems analysis, programming and datacenter operations. Contrast with insourcing. See netsourcing, ASP, SSP and facilities management.  of logistics and warehousing of spare parts Spare parts, also referred to as Service Parts is a term used to indicate extra parts available and in proximity to the mechanical item, such as a automobile, boat, engine, for which they might be used.

Spare parts are also called “spares.
 to a third-party logistics A third-party logistics provider (abbreviated 3PL) is a firm that provides outsourced or "third party" logistics services to companies for part, or sometimes all of their supply chain management function.  provider, more than offset the company's stronger performance in the first quarter of 2006. These disruptions made it difficult for the company to enter and process customer orders, procure To cause something to happen; to find and obtain something or someone.

Procure refers to commencing a proceeding; bringing about a result; persuading, inducing, or causing a person to do a particular act; obtaining possession or control over an item; or making a person
 and manage inventory, schedule orders for production and shipping and invoice An itemized statement or written account of goods sent to a purchaser or consignee by a vendor that indicates the quantity and price of each piece of merchandise shipped.

A consular invoice is one used in foreign trade.
 finished products to customers during the second quarter and, to a lesser extent, during the third quarter. The effect of these factors eased toward the end of the third quarter of 2006 as the company made progress in its remediation efforts and corrective action plan.
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NM= Not Meaningful

The company ended the third quarter with an approximately $13 million order backlog Backlog

The total value of sales orders waiting to be fulfilled.

Notes:
This figure is used mainly in the manufacturing industry. Increases or decreases in a company's backlog indicate the future direction of sales and earnings.
, primarily for systems and materials, a majority of which it expected to ship during the remainder of 2006.
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Note: Columns may not add due to rounding.

The residual business disruptions that the company continued to experience during the third quarter adversely impacted revenue from systems and services, with significant reductions in unit sales unit sales

Sales measured in terms of physical units rather than dollars. Unit sales data are often used by financial analysts when evaluating the health of a company.
 volume in each of those product and service classes. The company experienced continued revenue growth from its engineered materials and composites, which were less susceptible to the ERP and supply chain disruptions, reflecting the relative simplicity of the sourcing and logistics for these products and the positive traction Traction Definition

Traction is the use of a pulling force to treat muscle and skeleton disorders.
Purpose

Traction is usually applied to the arms and legs, the neck, the backbone, or the pelvis.
 that the company is already getting from its implementation of integrated materials' packaging and delivery systems into its new class of systems.

The company also reported that, on a geographic basis, the revenue decline for the first nine months of 2006 was due to a decline in European European

emanating from or pertaining to Europe.


European bat lyssavirus
see lyssavirus.

European beech tree
fagussylvaticus.

European blastomycosis
see cryptococcosis.
 revenue, with revenue from the U.S. and Asia-Pacific areas being essentially even with 2005 revenue as restated.

The decline in gross profit for the third quarter and first nine months of 2006 was due primarily to the combined effects of lower revenue and ERP system, supply chain and logistics disruptions that the company encountered.

During the third quarter of 2006, the company continued to extend special accommodations to certain customers whose orders for products, services or repairs to systems were delayed by the disruptions that the company encountered with its ERP system and logistics activities or who encountered stability issues with their equipment installations that the company was not able to quickly address as a result of resource and training constraints CONSTRAINTS - A language for solving constraints using value inference.

["CONSTRAINTS: A Language for Expressing Almost-Hierarchical Descriptions", G.J. Sussman et al, Artif Intell 14(1):1-39 (Aug 1980)].
 on its service organization. These accommodations adversely affected gross profit during the quarter. The impact of equipment stability and related resource training constraints eased toward the end of the third quarter of 2006, as the company made significant progress in its training and quality remediation efforts and corrective action plan. The company believes that its progress in remediating its new systems' teething teething /teeth·ing/ (teth´ing) the entire process resulting in eruption of the teeth.

teeth·ing
n.
The eruption or cutting of the teeth.
 problems and training gaps resulted in greater market acceptance of its new systems as reflected in its backlog at the end of the third quarter.
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Note: Columns may not add due to rounding.

Gross profit margin Gross profit margin

Gross profit divided by sales, which is equal to each sales dollar left over after paying for the cost of goods sold.


gross profit margin

A measure calculated by dividing gross profit by net sales.
 on products decreased to 41% in the third quarter of 2006 from 52% for the third quarter of 2005 as restated. Gross profit margin for products sold in the first nine months of 2006 decreased to 38% from 49% for the first nine months of 2005 as restated. The decrease in margins primarily reflects $1.4 million of inventory write-offs or adjustments resulting from various inventory reconciliation procedures as well as higher warranty expense as a result of items previously discussed, special customer accommodations and higher freight costs.

Gross profit margin on services decreased to 16% of consolidated service revenue for the third quarter of 2006 from 29% of consolidated service revenue for the third quarter of 2005 as restated. Gross profit margin on services decreased to 19% of consolidated service revenue for the first nine months of 2006 from 33% of consolidated service revenue for the first nine months of 2005 as restated. During the third quarter, service margins continued to be impacted by spare parts' shortages as a result of the ERP and supply-chain interruptions as well as the strains on resources related to installation, service and training mentioned above that resulted in foregone fore·gone
v.
Past participle of forego1.

adj.
Having gone before; previous.

Usage Note: The word foregone has recently developed a new meaning as a truncation of the phrase
 service income from time and materials labor and materials (time and materials) n. what some builders or repair people contract to provide and be paid for, rather than a fixed price or a percentage of the costs.  service activities. Service margins were also impacted by the absence of legacy system upgrade sales, which the company has previously announced that it would no longer support.
[TABLE OMITTED]


Note: Columns may not add due to rounding.

NM= Not Meaningful

Total operating expenses Operating expenses

The amount paid for asset maintenance or the cost of doing business, excluding depreciation. Earnings are distributed after operating expenses are deducted.
 increased by $6.0 million to $19.4 million in the third quarter of 2006 compared to $13.4 million in the third quarter of 2005 as restated and by $13.1 million to $50.5 million in the first nine months of 2006 compared to $37.5 million in the first nine months of 2005 as restated.

The increase in operating expenses for the third quarter was due primarily to $3.9 million of higher selling, general and administrative expenses, $1.7 million of severance The act of dividing, or the state of being divided.

The term severance has unique meanings in different branches of the law. Courts use the term in both civil and criminal litigation in two ways: first, when dividing a lawsuit into two or more parts, and second, when
 and restructuring restructuring - The transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject system's external behaviour (functionality and semantics).  costs related to the relocation RELOCATION, Scotch law, contracts. To let again to renew a lease, is called a relocation.
     2. When a tenant holds over after the expiration of his lease, with the consent of his landlord, this will amount to a relocation.
 of the company's headquarters to Rock Hill, South Carolina Rock Hill is the largest city in York County, South Carolina, and a satellite city of Charlotte, North Carolina. The population was 49,765 at the 2000 census. According to 2006 estimates, the city has a population of 61,620 , making it the fourth largest city in South Carolina. , which were generally in line with the company's previously announced expectations, and $0.4 million of higher research and development expenses.

The increase in operating expenses in the first nine months of 2006 was due to $6.2 million of higher selling, general and administrative expenses, $5.7 million of severance and restructuring costs related to the Rock Hill relocation, and $1.3 million of higher research and development expenses.

As the company previously disclosed, the higher research and development expenses in each period related to the company's continuing high level of new product development work, primarily related to its accelerated work on the development of additional desktop 3-D Printers, including the recently announced V-Flash[TM] desktop modeler, and other Rapid Manufacturing Building parts out of plastic or metal one layer at a time using a method of additive fabrication such as 3D printing. Multiple pieces, either similar or dissimilar, can be built simultaneously.  solutions. The higher selling, general and administrative expenses in each period resulted mostly from higher consulting expenses primarily related to the company's ERP and relocation projects, higher bad debt expense, and non-cash equity compensation expense related to unvested options.

At the end of the third quarter of 2006, the company had over $5 million of unrestricted cash recorded on its consolidated balance sheet consolidated balance sheet

A balance sheet in which assets and liabilities of a parent company and its controlled subsidiaries are combined, thereby presenting balance sheet items for the parent and its subsidiaries as if they were a single firm.
. Unrestricted cash increased to approximately $14 million at December 31, 2006. This includes approximately $8 million that the company had drawn at December 31, 2006 under its $15 million revolving credit Revolving Credit

A line of credit where the customer pays a commitment fee and is then allowed to use the funds when they are needed. It is usually used for operating purposes, fluctuating each month depending on the customers current cash flow needs.
 line with Silicon Valley Bank, which as reported in a Form 8-K Form 8-K

The form required by the SEC when a publicly held company incurs any event that might affect its financial situation or the share value of its stock.


Form 8-K

See 8-K.
 filing on January 25, 2007 has been amended a·mend  
v. a·mend·ed, a·mend·ing, a·mends

v.tr.
1. To change for the better; improve: amended the earlier proposal so as to make it more comprehensive.

2.
 on a basis that the company believes to be beneficial. We believe that both our cash management and our working capital management improved during the fourth quarter of 2006.

"We are very pleased today to be able to bring our third-quarter filing to current status and share with you in detail the scope and magnitude of our restatements and the results of the third quarter," said Abe Reichental, 3D Systems' president and chief executive officer.

"As we have already mentioned in our previous, frequent communications, during the third quarter, we continued to experience a number of challenges relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 our ERP implementation, the start-up Start-up

The earliest stage of a new business venture.
 of our recently outsourced logistics and warehousing activities, and the relocation of our operations, including the need to hire and train new employees who are not yet fully experienced with our new ERP system and financial accounting practices or fully familiar with our business. As you may recall, we started up our new ERP system in the U.S. on May 1, 2006 and in most of Europe in mid-June 2006. Following the start up of the system, we encountered disruptions in processing transactions in the system that affected our ability to enter and process customer orders, procure and manage inventory, schedule orders for production and shipping and invoice finished products to customers," continued Reichental. "As I shared with you earlier in January, we believe that we have made significant progress in remediating the root causes of these disruptions and fully expect the ERP system to ultimately improve our business processes, efficiency and control environment.

"As we have told you over the past several months, we also experienced significant disruptions in our supply chain activities that led to shortages of parts and materials, resulting in loss of parts and materials' revenue, a consequent con·se·quent  
adj.
1.
a. Following as a natural effect, result, or conclusion: tried to prevent an oil spill and the consequent damage to wildlife.

b.
 loss of service revenue, higher service and expediting costs and the need to compensate customers who were adversely affected by these shortages," continued Reichental. "These shortages also delayed shipments of finished products.

"Also, as we entered the third quarter, our new, sophisticated, advanced manufacturing-capable Sinterstation([R]) Pro and Viper[TM] Pro systems, with their broader range of capabilities, continued to require extensive commissioning and training to achieve operating stability and operating potential for some customers. As a result of the high volume of sales of these systems that we have enjoyed in recent quarters, and the continued need for additional commissioning and training time, we have also experienced field service resource constraints and equipment stability issues that delayed the start-up of some systems and impacted our effectiveness in servicing our higher volume 3-D Printing segment," continued Reichental.

"During the third quarter, we continued to address all of these issues, and made meaningful progress by working closely with our customers to resolve system stability issues in a mutually beneficial Adj. 1. mutually beneficial - mutually dependent
interdependent, mutualist

dependent - relying on or requiring a person or thing for support, supply, or what is needed; "dependent children"; "dependent on moisture"
 manner. We also intensified in·ten·si·fy  
v. in·ten·si·fied, in·ten·si·fy·ing, in·ten·si·fies

v.tr.
1. To make intense or more intense:
 our own internal training and provided more extensive customer training, support and installation activities than the services we traditionally provide with our legacy systems. While we encountered higher warranty and related costs that adversely affected our gross profit in the third quarter and first nine months of 2006, we believe that the remediation efforts we have undertaken throughout the third quarter and subsequently resulted in improved systems and organizational performance Organizational performance comprises the actual output or results of an organization as measured against its intended outputs (or goals and objectives).

Specialists in many fields are concerned with organizational performance including strategic planners, operations,
 since the end of the third quarter. Consequently, we expect to be able to return to normalized operating conditions as we complete the implementation of our corrective action plan," said Reichental.

"Notwithstanding all of these challenges, we are heartened by the fact that we ended the quarter with a significantly larger backlog of new orders compared to our historical experience, which we believe suggests that our lower-than-anticipated results in the third quarter were symptoms of the disruptions we experienced rather than a fundamental problem with our business," continued Reichental.

"We are pleased that, since the beginning of July, the focused execution against the corrective action plan that we have implemented enabled us to process and ship the majority of the new order backlog we had at the end of the third quarter. We believe that the significant backlog and our progress in shipping it suggests, first, that the demand for our products and services remains strong and, but for the temporary problems we experienced in fulfilling orders, would have contributed to a significantly better third quarter than we experienced and, second, that we are making real progress in correcting all of these disruptions. While we are not in a position today to comment in any detail on our performance in subsequent periods, we believe that our fourth-quarter 2006 revenue will reflect the continuation of the improving trend with which we exited the third quarter.

"Despite the disappointments that we encountered in the second and third quarters of 2006, we firmly believe that we have made significant progress in many areas as we continued to invest in infrastructure, products, people and capabilities to achieve our strategic objectives. Specifically, since the beginning of 2006:

* "We completed the consolidation of our corporate headquarters' and R&D activities in a new state-of-the-art facility in Rock Hill, South Carolina;

* "We announced an exclusive agreement with Symyx Technologies Symyx Technologies NASDAQ: SMMX is a pioneer in the area of combinatorial chemistry applied to heterogeneous catalysis and homogeneous catalysis, polymer formulations, electronic and magnetic materials.  to discover and commercialize advanced materials Advanced Materials is a leading peer-reviewed materials science journal published every two weeks. Advanced Materials includes Communications, Reviews, and Feature Articles from the cutting edge of materials science, including topics in chemistry, physics,  for use in our Rapid Prototyping Building a part one layer at a time using a method of additive fabrication such as 3D printing. Such parts are used for concept modeling to determine if the product design meets the customer's expectations.  and Rapid Manufacturing solutions;

* "We entered into an agreement to sell our Grand Junction Grand Junction, city (1990 pop. 29,034), seat of Mesa co., W Colo., at the junction of the Gunnison and Colorado rivers; inc. 1891. The shipping and processing center of a large ranch and irrigated farm region, it also serves the area's uranium, oil shale, gas, and  facility for a $7.0 million cash purchase price, subject to the satisfaction of certain customary conditions. We expect that transaction to be completed by the end of the first quarter of 2007;

* "All outstanding shares of our Series B Convertible Preferred Stock Convertible Preferred Stock

Preferred stock that includes an option for the holder to convert the preferred shares into a fixed number of common shares, usually anytime after a predetermined date. Also known as "convertible preferred shares".
 were converted into 3D Systems' common stock in June, simplifying our capital structure and reducing our dividend expense for the future;

* "We reported that we have entered into an amendment to the Silicon Valley Bank credit facility;

* "We are continuing our work to arrange financing for the purchase of our Rock Hill headquarters;

* "We continued in partnership with York York, former name of Toronto, Canada
York, Ont.: see Toronto, Ont., Canada.
York, city, England
York, city (1991 pop. 123,126) and district, North Yorkshire, N England, at the confluence of the Ouse and Foss rivers.
 Technical College to develop a world-class training center adjacent to our new headquarters;

* "We continued to expand our product portfolio consistent with our key initiatives to grow our Rapid Manufacturing and 3-D Printing base; and

* "We announced our plans to introduce a new fast, simple and economical 3-D Printer, the V-Flash([TM]) desktop modeler, capable of creating stereolithography-like parts in the office, home or school setting.

"Since the end of the third quarter of 2006, we continued to work to remedy as promptly as we could all the material weaknesses that we have identified. Also since the end of the third quarter, we continued to work to correct all of the remaining ERP, supply-chain, relocation and systems' stabilization-related issues. We believe that, as of today, the majority of our operational issues have been resolved successfully, and we expect to resolve any remaining operational and control issues as promptly as we can although we currently expect to report that the material weaknesses that we have identified and disclosed continued at year end. We remain confident in our overall direction and expect that the key initiatives and investments that we undertook throughout 2006 will provide us with the right platform to achieve our long-term Long-term

Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year.


long-term

1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term.
 objectives," concluded Reichental.

Conference Call and Audio Webcast Details

3D Systems will hold a conference call and audio Webcast to discuss its third quarter and first nine months' 2006 financial results this morning at 11:30 a.m. Eastern Time.

* To access the Conference Call, dial 1-888-336-3485 (or 706-634-0653 from outside the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. ). A recording will be available two hours after completion of the call for seven days. To access the recording, dial 1-800-642-1687 (or 706-645-9291 from outside the United States) and enter 8245255, the conference call ID number.

* To access the audio Webcast, log onto 3D Systems' website at www.3dsystems.com. The link to the Webcast is provided on the homepage of the website. To ensure timely participation and technical capability, we recommend logging on a few minutes prior to the conference call to activate your participation. The Webcast will be available for replay beginning approximately 48 hours after completion of the call at: www.3dsystems.com under the Investor Relations' section.

Forward-Looking Statements forward-looking statement

A projected financial statement based on management expectations. A forward-looking statement involves risks with regard to the accuracy of assumptions underlying the projections.
 

Certain statements made in this release that are not statements of historical or current facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) implemented several significant substantive changes affecting certain cases brought under the federal securities laws, including changes related to pleading, discovery, liability, class representation and awards fees and  of 1995. Forward-looking statements may involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to be materially different from historical results or from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In addition to statements that explicitly describe such risks and uncertainties, readers are urged to consider statements in the conditional or future tenses future tense
n.
A verb tense expressing future time.

Noun 1. future tense - a verb tense that expresses actions or states in the future
future
 or that include terms such as "believes," "belief," "expects," "estimates," "intends," "anticipates" or "plans" to be uncertain and forward-looking. Forward-looking statements may include comments as to the company's beliefs and expectations as to future events and trends affecting its business and expectations, including matters relating to the proposed restatements of the company's financial statements and related matters described herein, and are necessarily subject to uncertainties, many of which are outside the control of the company. The factors described under the headings "Forward-Looking Statements," "Cautionary Statements and Risk Factors," and "Risk Factors" in the company's periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as other factors, could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected or predicted in forward-looking statements.

About 3D Systems Corporation

3D Systems is a leading provider of Rapid 3-D Printing, Prototyping and Manufacturing solutions. Its systems and materials reduce the time and cost of designing products and facilitate direct and indirect manufacturing by creating actual parts directly from digital input. These solutions are used for design communication and prototyping as well as for production of functional end-use parts: Transform your products.

More information on the company is available at www.3dsystems.com, or via email at moreinfo@3dsystems.com.
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