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Apple and Meta headsets could face a big challenge: Sticker shock

Apple and Facebook parent Meta are expected to release mixed reality headsets in the coming year that could finally fulfill the industry's promise to turn head-worn devices into the next big shift in personal computing.

But there's one major potential snag: sticker shock.

The best-selling virtual reality headset, the Meta Quest 2, retails for $400 and accounted for 78% of the nascent VR market in 2021, according to IDC. Consumers who want the next-generation technology are going to have to spend multiples of that.

Meta's forthcoming high-end headset, codenamed Cambria, is expected to cost at least $800, the company said earlier this year. Apple's unannounced device could reportedly cost thousands of dollars. That's a hefty load for products in a category that's yet to go mainstream. Just 11.2 million VR units were shipped last year, IDC said. Apple sells that many iPhones every few weeks.

To expand the market, Meta and Apple will have to convince consumers that more advanced systems will be worth the investment. Both companies are reportedly betting on a new technology called passthrough mixed reality, which requires better displays and more processing power.

If passthrough mixed reality works as advertised, a VR headset would also function as a set of augmented reality glasses, enhancing the possibilities for applications and real-world use.

With existing VR devices, the experience is limited to what's on the headset's display. In passthrough AR, powerful cameras on the outside of a VR headset take video of the outside world and send it to two or more displays, one each in front of the user's eyes.

This allows for developers to play with mixed reality, overlaying software or graphics on the video of the real world from just outside.

Believers in mixed reality say that we'll eventually be able to condense the technology into a lightweight pair of glasses with transparent lenses. But that's for the future.

The passthrough approach is emerging as the preferred near-term option because optical transparent displays are nowhere near ready for primetime. The problem for today is that passthrough mixed reality requires a lot of expensive parts and a powerful headset, limiting the size of the market.

In addition to the advanced cameras, passthrough devices need depth sensors that can take detailed video and measurements of the user's surroundings. They also have to track the user's eyes so as not to waste power generating graphics that will go unseen. And they need powerful processing capabilities and software to reduce latency so that what the user sees inside the headset isn't delayed or blurred.

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Most important is the high-resolution screen that needs to be much denser than a smartphone display because it's so close to the user's eyes. Smartphone screens average about 550 pixels per inch, but mixed reality devices require displays with about 3,500 PPI, according to CounterPoint Research.

While Meta and Apple haven't released their headsets, a few devices currently on the market support passthrough mixed reality. The experiences tend to be limited — black and white or low-quality video — because of a lack of processing power.

A few weeks ago, I was able to test a headset from Varjo, a Finnish company co-founded by Urho Konttori, a former Microsoft and Nokia executive. Last year, Varjo released the XR-3, which offers full-color, low-latency passthrough mixed reality. It's expensive, heavy, and aimed at businesses. It costs $6,495 to purchase or about $1,500 to rent it for a year.

In playing around with the XR-3, I felt less isolated than with other VR headsets.

Varjo's XR-3 headset

Varjo

I could access a virtual world with the press of a single button, and I could pull up games that took over my entire field of view. I could use virtual computer monitors displaying Windows applications inside the virtual world.

I was also able to interact with the world around me through Varjo's passthrough view. In the demo, Varjo placed a life-size car model inside the space. I was able to walk around it and inspect its interior and discuss what I was seeing with someone who wasn't wearing a VR headset.

Most impressively, when passthrough was turned on, I could interact with the actual environment around me, carrying on a conversation with the person next to me or finding a chair and sitting in it. This isn't possible with existing VR technology, which forces you to remove yourself from the physical world.

Konttori told me that was one of his main goals. The company wants to almost mimic "human-eye" display quality, which he calls the "holy grail" of mixed reality.

'A single coherent scene'

Apple is notoriously secretive about its product roadmap, especially when it comes to new categories. The company has invested heavily in virtual reality research and development in its Technology Development Group and has purchased several startups specializing in mixed reality technology.

According to reports from Bloomberg and The Information, Apple is developing a mixed reality headset that resembles ski goggles with a powerful homegrown chip, similar to what powers its MacBook laptops, and higher-resolution displays than what's currently on the market.

The headset will reportedly support passthrough video and offer games and other applications. At one point, Apple was aiming for at least resolution similar to a 4K TV per eye for its first headset, because anything less could result in users seeing individual pixels, The Information reported.

Apple hasn't confirmed its plans to release a mixed reality headset, and the company didn't respond to a request for comment on this story. In an interview with Chinese media earlier this year, Apple CEO Tim Cook suggested that something is in the works.

Meta has said Project Cambria, with support of color passthrough, is scheduled to be released later this year. Based on renderings of the device that have been made public, it also looks like a pair of ski goggles. It will include pancake optics, a type of lens that doesn't need to be calibrated as finely as other VR lenses.

Meta said in May that the price for Cambria would be "significantly higher" than $800.

While passthrough technology has yet to hit the market in a real way and will be quite pricey once it does, metaverse developers are rallying behind it. The primary alternative, optically-based mixed reality, uses transparent displays built into lenses to integrate computer graphics with the real world. Microsoft's Hololens and Magic Leap use optical waveguides, a type of transparent display.

Transparent displays are also expensive, and they have their own sets of challenges. They're not good when used in bright daylight, and the current offerings can suffer from poor image quality and blurry text.

Varjo is making a bet on passthrough technology and Konttori says it's the better approach in large part because it's completely digital, putting more control in the hands of developers.

"It becomes computable," Konttori said. "It becomes a tool for artificial intelligence to be participating in your world, enhancing your view or your intellect, and you can distort the world in the tiniest ways or the biggest ways possible."

He expects passthrough to be "the winning approach for a very, very long time."

WATCH: The future of entertainment is mixed reality gaming experiences


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/apple-and-meta-headsets-could-face-a-big-challenge-sticker-shock/?feed_id=11924&_unique_id=62fc5bb28f0c2

Pinterest (PINS) Q2 2022 earnings

Pinterest shares jumped on better-than-expected user numbers even as earnings and revenue missed estimates and the company gave weak guidance for the third quarter.

Activist investor Elliott Management confirmed separately that it's Pinterest's top investor and said it has "conviction in the value-creation opportunity" at the company. 

Here's how the company did.

  • Earnings: 11 cents adjusted per share vs. 18 cents per share expected, according to Refinitiv.
  • Revenue: $666 million vs. $667 million expected, according to Refinitiv.

Pinterest said global monthly active users declined by 5% from a year earlier to 433 million. While that sort of drop-off is alarming for a social media app that relies on eyeballs to attract advertisers, analysts were expecting a steeper decline to 431 million.

The company's financials were gloomy, following a trend in the social media market. Facebook parent Meta, Twitter, and Snap all reported second-quarter earnings that missed on the top and bottom lines, and all attributed a weak online advertising market to their bleak results.

A woman walks past sign at the headquarters of Pinterest in the South of Market neighborhood of San Francisco.

Smith Collection | Gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images

More troubling than its second-quarter results was Pinterest's commentary about what's expected this quarter. The company said it estimates third-quarter revenue will grow "mid-single digits on a year-over-year percentage basis," below analysts' projections for sales growth of 12.7%.

In a letter to investors, Pinterest said economic challenges are leading marketers to reel in spending.

"The macroeconomic environment has created meaningful uncertainty for our advertiser partners," Pinterest said in the letter." The company said it saw "lower than expected demand from U.S. big box retailers and mid-market advertisers, who pulled back ad spend due to concerns about weakening consumer demand."

Pinterest said that its third-quarter guidance takes into account "slightly greater foreign exchange headwinds" than the previous quarter.

In June, Pinterest co-founder Ben Silbermann stepped down as the company's CEO, and was replaced by Bill Ready, previously the leader of Google's commerce unit. Pinterest's hiring of Ready pointed to a deeper push into e-commerce and online retail.

Elliott's involvement with the company was reported in July by The Wall Street Journal, which said at the time that the firm had built a stake of over 9% in the company. After Pinterest's results were released on Monday, Elliott confirmed it's the company's biggest shareholder and said it's pleased with Ready's progress.

"As the market-leading platform at the intersection of social media, search and commerce, Pinterest occupies a unique position in the advertising and shopping ecosystems, and CEO Bill Ready is the right leader to oversee Pinterest's next phase of growth," Elliott said in a statement.

WATCH: Earnings Exchange looks at Pinterest, Caterpillar and JetBlue


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/pinterest-pins-q2-2022-earnings/?feed_id=5433&_unique_id=62e8b422b3c48

Amazon (AMZN) Q2 2022 earnings

Amazon shares climbed more than 11% in extended trading on Thursday after the company reported better-than-expected second-quarter revenue and gave an optimistic outlook.

Here's how the company did:

  • EPS: Loss of 20 cents
  • Revenue: $121.23 billion vs. $119.09 billion expected, according to Refinitiv

Here's how other key Amazon segments did during the quarter:

  • Amazon Web Services: $19.7 billion vs. $19.56 billion expected, according to StreetAccount
  • Advertising: $8.76 billion vs. $8.65 billion expected, according to StreetAccount

Revenue growth of 7% in the second quarter topped estimates, bucking the trend among its Big Tech peers, which all reported disappointing results prior Thursday. Apple, along with Amazon, beat expectations.

Amazon said it expects to post third-quarter revenue between $125 billion and $130 billion, representing growth of 13% to 17%. Analysts were expecting sales of $126.4 billion, according to Refinitiv.

Amazon has been contending with higher costs, as pandemic-driven expansion left the company with too many workers and too much warehouse capacity.

"Despite continued inflationary pressures in fuel, energy, and transportation costs, we're making progress on the more controllable costs we referenced last quarter, particularly improving the productivity of our fulfillment network," CEO Andy Jassy said in a statement.

Amazon shaved its headcount by 99,000 people to 1.52 million employees as of the end of the second quarter after almost doubling in size during the pandemic.

Amazon recorded a $3.9 billion loss on its Rivian investment after shares of the electric vehicle maker plunged 49% in the second quarter. That brings its total loss on the investment this year to $11.5 billion.

Because of the Rivian writedown, Amazon had an overall loss of $2 billion in the quarter. Analysts' EPS estimates varied dramatically, making it difficult to compare actual results to a consensus number.

Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe and Udit Madan stand in front of the new Amazon EV van powered by Rivian. Amazon and Rivian unveil their final custom Electric Delivery Vehicles (EDV) to begin using them for customer deliveries, in Chicago, Illinois, July 21, 2022.

Jim Vondruska | Reuters

Amazon's core e-commerce business continues to suffer as online sales are no longer flourishing like they were at the height of the Covid-19 shutdown. The company's online stores segment declined 4% year over year. Physical store sales continued to rebound from the year-ago period, growing 12%.

Amazon's ad business is a bright spot in an otherwise gloomy quarter for online advertising, and shows the company is picking up share in one of its fastest-growing businesses.

Ad revenue climbed 18% in the period. Facebook, meanwhile, recorded its first ever drop in revenue and forecast another decline for the third quarter. At Alphabet, advertising growth slowed to 12%, and YouTube showed a dramatic deceleration to 4.8% from 84% a year earlier.

Among the other top tech companies, Microsoft also reported disappointing results this week. Apple beat on the top and bottom lines, lifting the stock in after-hours trading.

Amazon's cloud segment continues to hum along. Sales at Amazon Web Services jumped 33% from a year earlier to $19.74 billion, above the $19.56 billion projected by Wall Street.

Operating income, which excludes the investment-related loss, shrank to $3.3 billion from $7.7 billion a year earlier. AWS generated operating income of $5.7 billion, accounting for all of Amazon's profit plus some in the period.

The upbeat results could also help improve the mood around Jassy, who replaced Jeff Bezos as CEO a little over a year ago. Jassy's first year on the job has been marred by challenges, including an ongoing labor battle, the market downturn, growing regulatory pressure and an exodus of top talent.

He's also under pressure to show he can return Amazon's core retail business to the growth investors have become accustomed to seeing, a difficult task given the macro pressures the company faces, such as soaring inflation and slowing consumer discretionary spending.

WATCH: The first look at Amazon and Rivian's electric delivery vans


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/amazon-amzn-q2-2022-earnings/?feed_id=3550&_unique_id=62e30440daefe

Apple Q3 2022 earnings preview: Macroeconomic concerns dominate

Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc., speaks during the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference at Apple Park campus in Cupertino, California, US, on Monday, June 6, 2022.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Apple reports earnings on Thursday for the quarter ended in June.

The third quarter of Apple's fiscal year is typically the company's smallest by sales. The quarter is in the back half of the iPhone's annual refresh cycle as investors start to look forward to the release of a new model, which boosts sales starting in late September or October.

This year, analysts and investors will be closely watching Apple's earnings in the face of many new macroeconomic trends, including declining consumer confidence, rising interest rates, and decades-high inflation.

So far, Apple's sales have remained strong, partially because its customers are a fairly well-off group/ But any signs that people are putting off Mac and iPhone purchases because of inflation or recession fears could have implications for the whole economy.

Apple also has significant exposure to China, both as a market to sell its products and as the country where most of its products are assembled. Several Apple factories in China had production shifted or suspended at times during the June quarter because of Covid lockdowns.

Analysts polled by FactSet expect Apple to report $82.8 billion in sales, which would be under 2% growth from the same quarter last year and the slowest growth quarter since the start of the pandemic.

Analysts are also expecting $1.16 in earnings per share, which would be a 10.7% decline on an annual basis. Gross margin will also decline from 43.7% last quarter — high for Apple historically — to between 42% and 43%, the company said in April.

Supply issues and China lockdowns

In April, the story for Apple wasn't about demand: it was about supply. "Right now, our main focus, frankly speaking, is on the supply side," Apple CEO Tim Cook told analysts.

Apple warned of a $4 billion to $8 billion revenue hit stemming from supply issues, including chip shortages and production snags. Some analysts say that Apple will signal that it managed the supply chain well and the revenue hit will end up on the low-end of Apple's guide.

"We believe the company has managed its supply chain better than it planned a quarter ago, while it continued to gain share in an otherwise difficult quarter for smartphones and PCs," Deutsche Bank analyst Sidney Ho wrote in a recent note.

That could be good for iPad sales, which have taken a hit in the past few quarters as Apple prioritized parts for iPhones and other products.

"We also anticipate improving iPad sales in part due to improving supply and believe Apple's $4 billion to $8 billion supply headwind commentary for the June quarter was more likely at the lower-end of this range," Canaccord Genuity analyst T. Michael Walkley wrote in a note this month.

Apple has grappled with shutdowns in urban China, including in Shanghai. Covid restrictions could have hurt Apple's iPhone sales in China early in the quarter, but could have charged sales in June as people left lockdown ready to spend.

Analysts polled by FactSet predict that Apple's Greater China sales will be around $13.79 billion, which would be a decline from the $14.56 billion in sales from a year ago.

September quarter demand

Can Apple remain a safe haven?

Overall, analysts are still confident in Apple as an efficient company with a strong cash balance, loyal customers, and competitive products.

But can Apple remain a safe haven as other tech stocks drop and the markets recede? Apple is down nearly 15% so far in 2022, but that's better than the Nasdaq, which is down 18%.

"Apple remains a best of breed consumer electronics company able to invest through cycles, and with 60%+ of revenue more staples-like in nature, strong brand loyalty, and continued product/services innovation, we believe it is better insulated relative to peers during a downturn," Morgan Stanley's Huberty wrote.

One key for Apple investors in a downturn will be the growth of its services businesses, which makes overall hardware sales growth less crucial. Apple services, which include monthly subscriptions, payment fees, warranties, search licensing fees from Google, and revenue from the iPhone App Store, also offer higher margins than its core hardware business.

Apple's services business is predicted to be up 12% on an annual basis, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet.

That's a slower growth rate than the 17% annualized growth it posted in its second quarter, and a significant decline from the 27% growth Apple posted in its services business in 2021.

JP Morgan's Samik Chatterjee believes that Apple's plan to buy back shares will buoy the stock, even if its earnings underwhelm. Apple's board authorized $90 billion in additional share buybacks and dividends in April.

"We believe the resilience of the earnings estimates in the backdrop of macro deterioration, including both inflation and adverse FX, will continue to drive investors to prefer Apple with strong cash generation and balance sheet that will allow it to offset any earnings dilution on account of the macro through buybacks," Chatterjee wrote in a note.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/apple-q3-2022-earnings-preview-macroeconomic-concerns-dominate/?feed_id=2486&_unique_id=62e033a980637