Apple is expected to announce a mixed reality headset – its first brand-new product for eight years – at its annual event for developers.
The tech giant’s WWDC showcase is usually reserved for software reveals – notably the next major updates for its iPhones, iPads, and Macs – but this year fresh hardware is on the cards.
An Apple headset has long been rumoured, and reports suggest the company will finally unveil its first foray into an increasingly crowded field during Monday’s event.
You will likely have come across virtual and augmented reality in recent years, and probably even tried them.
Virtual reality is all about placing you into an entirely digital world, cutting you off from the outside world, and putting everything from your living room shelves to your pet cat at risk.
It’s been a big year for these kinds of headsets – the PlayStation VR2 launched in February, while Metahas announced the Quest 3 will launch this autumn. Both are focused on gaming, and priced around £500.
Augmented reality instead places digital elements into the real world – you play around with this all the time on your phone through things like the Ikea app, Snapchat filters, and Pokemon Go.
Image: Pokemon Go is one of the most successful mainstream demonstrations of AR
Mixed reality takes that concept further – rather than some swish digital furniture and pocket monsters simply being overlaid on to your surroundings, the idea is you’ll interact with them as if they were really there.
Imagine working on a virtual sculpture at your real desk, for example, or a surgeon-in-training practising a complex operation on a digital patient.
It sounds expensive…
Mixed reality has already proved to be an expensive proposition – Meta’s premium Quest Pro headset, which is more targeted towards industry and education than entertainment, launched at £1,499 last October.
Apple has never been afraid of a hefty price tag, and reports suggest its headset will cost as much as $3,000 (£2,409), putting it way above the starting price of its phones, tablets, and computers.
Given that, and that it is being announced at WWDC, it will likely be targeted at professionals and developers at first, rather than the average customer.
Image: Consumer headsets like the PlayStation VR 2 are mostly focused on gaming and entertainment
What will Apple’s headset offer?
Bloomberg reports communication and productivity will be among the headset’s main use cases, and quoted a person who worked on the device as saying it’s a “status symbol” product.
It’s been tipped to boast 4K resolution images, full body motion tracking, half a dozen cameras to provide views of the outside world, and the same kind of powerful M2 chips seen in its Macs.
The headset is also expected to run its own operating system, so you can navigate via movements and your voice, rather than an adapted version of a familiar iPhone or Mac interface.
And just as Apple’s devices have separate App Stores, the headset will have its own, with bespoke versions of the software you’re used to on iPhone. Fingers crossed we also get terrifying full-scale versions of our Memoji avatars.
According to Bloomberg, Apple will release the headset – tentatively dubbed Reality Pro – in late 2023 or early 2024.
Image: Apple boss Tim Cook will likely take to the stage at WWDC
What else can we expect from the event?
WWDC will still dedicate plenty of time to existing products.
This year’s big iPhone update, iOS 17, will arrive in time for the next handset in September.
It is aimed at people who suffer conditions that could mean they lose their ability to speak in future.
The biggest new software feature rumoured is a landscape mode for when your iPhone is charging, which would essentially turn it into a smart display, similarly to Google’s new Pixel Tablet. It could show things like calendar appointments at a glance, rather than just notifications or the time.
Updates to the iPhone’s software are often mirrored on the iPad, so the same feature could appear there too.
Macs and the Apple Watch should also get some attention – there are rumours that widgets, which have shaken up iPhone and iPad home screens in recent years, could come to the latter.
There’s also talk of a new MacBook Air, with a bigger size of 15 inches.
We don’t have to wait long to find out – WWDC 2023 kicks off at 6pm UK time on Monday.
Britain’s biggest high street bank is in talks to buy Curve, the digital wallet provider, amid growing regulatory pressure on Apple to open its payment services to rivals.
Sky News has learnt that Lloyds Banking Group is in advanced discussions to acquire Curve for a price believed to be up to £120m.
City sources said this weekend that if the negotiations were successfully concluded, a deal could be announced by the end of September.
Curve was founded by Shachar Bialick, a former Israeli special forces soldier, in 2016.
Three years later, he told an interviewer: “In 10 years time we are going to be IPOed [listed on the public equity markets]… and hopefully worth around $50bn to $60bn.”
One insider said this weekend that Curve was being advised by KBW, part of the investment bank Stifel, on the discussions with Lloyds.
If a mooted price range of £100m-£120m turns out to be accurate, that would represent a lower valuation than the £133m Curve raised in its Series C funding round, which concluded in 2023.
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That round included backing from Britannia, IDC Ventures, Cercano Management – the venture arm of Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen’s estate – and Outward VC.
It was also reported to have raised more than £40m last year, while reducing employee numbers and suspending its US expansion.
In total, the company has raised more than £200m in equity since it was founded.
Curve has been positioned as a rival to Apple Pay in recent years, having initially launched as an app enabling consumers to combine their debit and credit cards in a single wallet.
One source close to the prospective deal said that Lloyds had identified Curve as a strategically attractive bid target as it pushes deeper into payments infrastructure under chief executive Charlie Nunn.
Lloyds is also said to believe that Curve would be a financially rational asset to own because of the fees Apple charges consumers to use its Apple Pay service.
In March, the Financial Conduct Authority and Payment Systems Regulator began working with the Competition and Markets Authority to examine the implications of the growth of digital wallets owned by Apple and Google.
Lloyds owns stakes in a number of fintechs, including the banking-as-a-service platform ThoughtMachine, but has set expanding its tech capabilities as a key strategic objective.
The group employs more than 70,000 people and operates more than 750 branches across Britain.
Curve is chaired by Lord Fink, the former Man Group chief executive who has become a prolific investor in British technology start-ups.
When he was appointed to the role in January, he said: “Working alongside Curve as an investor, I have had a ringside seat to the company’s unassailable and well-earned rise.
“Beginning as a card which combines all your cards into one, to the all-encompassing digital wallet it has evolved into, Curve offers a transformative financial management experience to its users.
“I am proud to have been part of the journey so far, and welcome the chance to support the company through its next, very significant period of growth.”
IDC Ventures, one of the investors in Curve’s Series C funding round, said at the time of its last major fundraising: “Thanks to their unique technology…they have the capability to intercept the transaction and supercharge the customer experience, with its Double Dip Rewards, [and] eliminating nasty hidden fees.
“And they do it seamlessly, without any need for the customer to change the cards they pay with.”
News of the talks between Lloyds and Curve comes days before Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, is expected to outline plans to bolster Britain’s fintech sector by endorsing a concierge service to match start-ups with investors.
Lord Fink declined to comment when contacted by Sky News on Saturday morning, while Curve did not respond to an enquiry sent by email.
Lloyds also declined to comment, while Stifel KBW could not be reached for comment.
The UK economy unexpectedly shrank in May, even after the worst of Donald Trump’s tariffs were paused, official figures showed.
A standard measure of economic growth, gross domestic product (GDP), contracted 0.1% in May, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
Rather than a fall being anticipated, growth of 0.1% was forecast by economists polled by Reuters as big falls in production and construction were seen.
It followed a 0.3% contraction in April, when Mr Trump announced his country-specific tariffs and sparked a global trade war.
A 90-day pause on these import taxes, which has been extended, allowed more normality to resume.
This was borne out by other figures released by the ONS on Friday.
Exports to the United States rose £300m but “remained relatively low” following a “substantial decrease” in April, the data said.
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Overall, there was a “large rise in goods imports and a fall in goods exports”.
A ‘disappointing’ but mixed picture
It’s “disappointing” news, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said. She and the government as a whole have repeatedly said growing the economy was their number one priority.
“I am determined to kickstart economic growth and deliver on that promise”, she added.
But the picture was not all bad.
Growth recorded in March was revised upwards, further indicating that companies invested to prepare for tariffs. Rather than GDP of 0.2%, the ONS said on Friday the figure was actually 0.4%.
It showed businesses moved forward activity to be ready for the extra taxes. Businesses were hit with higher employer national insurance contributions in April.
The expansion in March means the economy still grew when the three months are looked at together.
While an interest rate cut in August had already been expected, investors upped their bets of a 0.25 percentage point fall in the Bank of England’s base interest rate.
Such a cut would bring down the rate to 4% and make borrowing cheaper.
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Analysts from economic research firm Pantheon Macro said the data was not as bad as it looked.
“The size of the manufacturing drop looks erratic to us and should partly unwind… There are signs that GDP growth can rebound in June”, said Pantheon’s chief UK economist, Rob Wood.
Why did the economy shrink?
The drops in manufacturing came mostly due to slowed car-making, less oil and gas extraction and the pharmaceutical industry.
The fall was not larger because the services industry – the largest part of the economy – expanded, with law firms and computer programmers having a good month.
It made up for a “very weak” month for retailers, the ONS said.
Monthly Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures are volatile and, on their own, don’t tell us much.
However, the picture emerging a year since the election of the Labour government is not hugely comforting.
This is a government that promised to turbocharge economic growth, the key to improving livelihoods and the public finances. Instead, the economy is mainly flatlining.
Output shrank in May by 0.1%. That followed a 0.3% drop in April.
However, the subsequent data has shown us that much of that growth was artificial, with businesses racing to get orders out of the door to beat the possible introduction of tariffs. Property transactions were also brought forward to beat stamp duty changes.
In April, we experienced the hangover as orders and industrial output dropped. Services also struggled as demand for legal and conveyancing services dropped after the stamp duty changes.
Many of those distortions have now been smoothed out, but the manufacturing sector still struggled in May.
Signs of recovery
Manufacturing output fell by 1% in May, but more up-to-date data suggests the sector is recovering.
“We expect both cars and pharma output to improve as the UK-US trade deal comes into force and the volatility unwinds,” economists at Pantheon Macroeconomics said.
Meanwhile, the services sector eked out growth of 0.1%.
A 2.7% month-to-month fall in retail sales suppressed growth in the sector, but that should improve with hot weather likely to boost demand at restaurants and pubs.
Struggles ahead
It is unlikely, however, to massively shift the dial for the economy, the kind of shift the Labour government has promised and needs in order to give it some breathing room against its fiscal rules.
The economy remains fragile, and there are risks and traps lurking around the corner.
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Concerns that the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is considering tax hikes could weigh on consumer confidence, at a time when businesses are already scaling back hiring because of national insurance tax hikes.
Inflation is also expected to climb in the second half of the year, further weighing on consumers and businesses.