Snap unveils latest AR glasses despite ongoing struggles in core ad business

Snap unveils latest AR glasses despite ongoing struggles in core ad business


Evan Spiegel, CEO of Snap Inc., speaks onstage during the Snap Partner Summit 2023 at Barker Hangar on April 19, 2023 in Santa Monica, California. 

Joe Scarnici | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Snap on Tuesday announced the fifth generation of its Spectacles augmented reality glasses that can overlay digital graphics onto the physical world.

The latest Spectacles are only available for developers, who must commit to paying $99 a month for one full year if they want to build AR apps for the device. The glasses can produce more compelling digital visuals than the prior version and are built on top of a redesigned software operating system dubbed Snap OS.

Additionally, Snap is partnering with ChatGPT creator OpenAI to give developers tools that will allow them to build and port their artificial intelligence features for the smart glasses.

Snap’s announcement comes days before rival Meta’s Connect event, a conference where Facebook’s parent typically unveils its latest hardware. Like Meta, Snap has been trying for years to break into consumer hardware. Unlike Meta, Snap’s core online advertising business has been struggling.

Snap shares fell more than 20% after the company reported its latest quarterly results in August. Investors balked at weaker-than-expected guidance for the third quarter, and the company’s revenue for the second quarter trailed analysts’ expectations.

The previous day Meta reported better-than-expected quarterly results that sent the stock price up 7%. Still, Meta’s AR and VR bets continue to rack up losses — the company’s Reality Labs unit posted a $4.5 billion loss in the second quarter. That unit is responsible for the company’s Quest virtual reality devices and Ray-Ban smart glasses.

Since 2020, Meta has poured more than $63 billion in expenses into its hardware efforts. The company has yet to find meaningful success, but Wall Street has afforded Meta patience with Reality Labs because the company’s advertising business is thriving.

Meta brought in $131.9 billion in advertising sales for 2023, and reported net income of $39.1 billion for the year. By contrast, Snap recorded $4.6 billion in total revenue and a net loss of $1.3 billion in 2023.

“We are at a point where the challenge with Snap is that it is just functioning at a different scale than Meta,” said Leo Gebbie, a principal analyst and director at CCS Insight.

Fifth-generation Spectacles are pictured in a handout image, obtained by Reuters on September 12, 2024. 

Snap | Via Reuters

With Meta selling its Quest VR headsets at a loss in order to lead and influence the overall VR market, Gebbie said he expects the company to follow a similar aggressive pricing strategy if it debuts its own AR device. For Snap to compete, the company’s AR device must be “something really impressive” that incorporates the best of its core Snapchat app and appeals to the younger demographic that differentiates it from Meta, he said.

Snap doesn’t break out financials for its hardware efforts as Meta does, but the company has struggled to find success selling hardware.

Snap debuted its first internet-connected Spectacles glasses in 2016, pitching the $130 devices as an easy way for users to capture short, first-person videos that they could post on Snapchat. A year later, Snap disclosed that it wrote down nearly $40 million due to losses from unsold Spectacles, underscoring the challenges it faces selling consumer hardware products.

Since then, the company has released other versions of its Spectacles smart glasses, including a version for $380 in 2019. In 2021, it sold a pair of glasses with AR capabilities in limited numbers to developers and creators instead of the general public, making the product more of a prototype requiring further improvement before a wider release.

Beyond glasses, Snap said in 2022 that it would stop developing its Pixy flying camera drone just months after it released the $230 gadget.

In getting out ahead of Meta with its latest AR glasses, Snap is using a strategy taken by the Facebook parent last summer when CEO Mark Zuckerberg disclosed details of the company’s Quest 3 VR headset a week before Apple announced its much-anticipated Vision Pro VR headset.

Much of Meta’s AR strategy involves sprinkling some AR features into its Quest-branded VR headsets while simultaneously pushing its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, made in partnership with EssilorLuxottica. The two companies on Tuesday announced that they had extended their partnership to continue developing smart glasses.

Although Meta doesn’t release sales figures, Zuckerberg has told analysts that its Ray-Ban Meta glasses that went on sale in October “continue to do well and are sold out in many styles and colors, so we’re working to make more and release additional styles as quickly as we can.”

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel has centered the company’s hardware efforts around camera technology, which he believes is a natural fit with the core Snapchat app and its 850 million monthly active users.

It’s unclear how much longer investors will stomach Snap’s hardware push.

“We have seen the losses on Reality Labs grow quarter by quarter, and investors have indulged this because Meta is making enough profit from its advertising business,” Gebbie said. “Snap is hugely more constrained. It’s in a position where to meaningfully compete on hardware is going to be incredibly challenging.”

WATCH: Jim Cramer discusses Snap and the market

Cramer’s Mad Dash: Snap



Source

Asia-Pacific markets set to mostly climb as investors await slew of economic data
World

Asia-Pacific markets set to mostly climb as investors await slew of economic data

The upscale shopping district of Ginza in Tokyo, Japan, on Saturday, May 4, 2024.  Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Asia-Pacific markets were set to mostly climb Friday as investors await a slew of economic data in the region. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 is set to open higher with the futures contract in Osaka last trading […]

Read More
Transport stock charts aren’t saying the economy is fine
World

Transport stock charts aren’t saying the economy is fine

Markets stabilized on Thursday after the dual sell-off in stocks and bonds, but a key corner of the equity market is blinking a caution light on the economy. The Dow Jones Transportation Average is headed for a losing week and has fallen back below its pre-April 2 Liberation Day levels. JB Hunt Transport Services and […]

Read More
This wholesaler is still ripe for gains even after a 30% move, global strategist says
World

This wholesaler is still ripe for gains even after a 30% move, global strategist says

Despite a weak day for stock in BJ’s Wholesale Club Holdings on Thursday, Freedom Capital Markets chief global strategist Jay Woods is sticking by the company after a better-than-expected first-quarter print. Woods discussed the wholesaler and his bullish views on Uber and Palo Alto Networks on CNBC’s ” Power Lunch ” on Thursday. BJ’s Wholesale […]

Read More