TLDR
- Laser Photonics (LASE) stock jumped 22.6% Tuesday after announcing an ~$800,000 robotic laser cleaning cell delivery
- The order went to Vander-Bend Manufacturing, a precision sheet metal maker serving the data center supply chain
- The system uses two coordinated robots to automate pre-weld processing of zinc-coated panels used in data centers
- LASE says the cell format can apply to defense, semiconductor, medical device, and EV battery markets too
- The company has a market cap of ~$75.49M but carries weak financials: GF Score of 52/100, Financial Strength rated 2/10
Laser Photonics (LASE) stock surged 22.6% on Tuesday, trading up to $2.357, after the company announced it had delivered its first robotic laser cleaning cell to Vander-Bend Manufacturing.
Laser Photonics Corporation, LASE
The order, valued at approximately $800,000, marks LASE’s first entry into the data center infrastructure supply chain.
Vander-Bend makes precision sheet metal components for major U.S. data center operators. The robotic cell was built to automate a pre-weld cleaning process that had previously been done by hand — slowly and inconsistently.
The system uses two coordinated robots. One positions the metal panels at the cleaning station. The other guides a laser ablation head to strip zinc coating from weld zones before joining.
That manual process was a production bottleneck. The robotic system removes it.
What makes the cell more than a one-trick order is its programmability. Rather than being locked to a single part type, operators can switch programs to process different components through the same system.
CEO Wayne Tupuola said the delivery puts the company inside “one of the most dynamic and capital-intensive sectors in the U.S. economy today,” pointing to the labor and consistency constraints facing data center suppliers.
What the Order Actually Is
This wasn’t a software contract or a letter of intent. LASE delivered a complete, enclosed robotic cell — hardware already shipped and installed at a customer facility.
The cell handles surface preparation ahead of welding, coating, or bonding. That makes the underlying technology applicable across other industries too — the company named defense, semiconductor, medical devices, and EV battery manufacturing as potential markets.
For a company with a market cap of just $75.49 million, an $800,000 order carries weight. But the reaction in the stock suggests investors are pricing in more than one deal.
A Closer Look at the Financials
The enthusiasm in the stock price needs some context. LASE’s GF Score sits at 52 out of 100, which GuruFocus describes as average performance relative to peers.
More pressing: its Financial Strength and Profitability ratings both come in at 2 out of 10. That’s not a typo.
The company’s price-to-sales ratio is 5.18. For a business with weak profitability scores, that’s a valuation that leaves little room for error.
Insider activity over the past three months hasn’t offered much encouragement either. There was no insider buying, while one insider sold 5,800 stock units.
None of that means the order doesn’t matter — it does. Getting into the data center supply chain is a real milestone for a small industrial laser company. But the financials are a reminder that a single $800K delivery doesn’t transform the balance sheet overnight.
The stock closed Tuesday up roughly 19.63% at $2.357, reflecting the market’s initial read on what the Vander-Bend deal could signal for the pipeline ahead.
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