Meta’s Reality Labs posts $4.4 billion loss in third quarter

Meta’s Reality Labs posts .4 billion loss in third quarter


Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg presents Orion AR Glasses as he makes a keynote speech during the Meta Connect annual event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Sept. 25, 2024.

Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters

Despite Meta’s successful showcase of its Orion prototype AR glasses in September, the social media giant continues to lose billions of dollars a quarter developing the still nascent metaverse.

Meta reported third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, in which it said its Reality Labs unit, which develops augmented and virtual reality technologies, logged an operating loss of $4.4 billion. Analysts polled by StreetAccount were expecting that unit to post an operating loss of $4.68 billion.

Reality Labs revenue rose 29% year over year to $270 million in the third quarter, below analysts’ expectations of $310.4 million. Reality Labs primarily makes money through selling Meta’s Quest VR headsets and the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

Meta first entered the VR market in 2014 when it was still named Facebook and bought the VR startup Oculus for $2 billion.

Facebook co-founder and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg believes developing VR and AR technology could position the company to become a leader in what could become the next major personal computing platform.

The investment has been costly for Meta. After the company’s Wednesday earnings report, Reality Labs has an operating loss of more than $58 billion since 2020.

All that spending culminated in Zuckerberg’s demonstration of the Orion device at the company’s annual Connect conference in September.

Orion has generated excitement and helped lift spirits within Meta about Zuckerberg’s ambitious plans. Meta hopes to capitalize off the unexpected success of its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which it develops with eyewear giant EssilorLuxottica, and pitch consumers on future Orion AR glasses after it courts developers to build apps for the device next year, CNBC reported.

Also in September, Meta released its newest VR headset, the Quest 3S, pitching it as a more affordable way for consumers to experience VR at a starting price of $299. Last year, Meta released the more powerful Quest 3 VR headset, which has a starting price of $499.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Why Meta and Snap think AR glasses will be the future of computing



Source

Inside the Gulf’s trillion-dollar AI gamble
World

Inside the Gulf’s trillion-dollar AI gamble

With energy and cash to spare, the Middle East’s wealthy Gulf states are attempting to position themselves as the next global AI hub. Source

Read More
Dow drops 400 points as AI stocks resume their decline, Nasdaq falls 1.9%: Live updates
World

Dow drops 400 points as AI stocks resume their decline, Nasdaq falls 1.9%: Live updates

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. NYSE U.S. stocks retreated on Thursday as names in the artificial intelligence trade came under pressure yet again amid worries around eye-watering valuations. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 455 points, or 1%. The S&P 500 traded down by 1.2%, while the Nasdaq […]

Read More
Alibaba-backed Moonshot releases its second AI update in four months as China’s AI race heats up
World

Alibaba-backed Moonshot releases its second AI update in four months as China’s AI race heats up

Alibaba-backed Chinese startup Moonshot has launched one of the more popular generative AI chatbots called Kimi. Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images Chinese startup Moonshot on Thursday released its latest generative artificial intelligence model which claims to beat OpenAI’s ChatGPT in “agentic” capabilities — or understanding what a user wants without explicit step-by-step instructions. […]

Read More