3 Top Augmented Reality Stocks You Should Consider Buying

When Niantic's Pokemon Go game launched in early 2016, it helped bring augmented reality (AR) to the forefront of many consumers' minds. And while the hype around catching virtual Pikachus in a public park has subsided a bit, the idea that AR could be one of the next transformational technologies hasn't. Augmented reality technology overlays computer-generated images on a person's view of the real world, and it's used for much more than games.

AR is still in its early stages, but augmented reality glasses and software are already being used as a tool to train workers on how to repair manufacturing equipment and to teach new surgeons how to best perform their jobs. It's no wonder, then, that AR has the potential to become a $61 billion market by 2023, according to Research and Markets.

There are plenty of companies pivoting to this growing AR market. Taking the lead are Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB), and they are likely to see a lot of growth from AR in the coming years.

Woman moving an augmented reality world with her hands.
Woman moving an augmented reality world with her hands.

Image source: Getty Images.

Apple's next big device?

The consumer tech world is still fawning over the new iPhone X, but a recent Bloomberg report continues to give credibility to the rumor that Apple is working toward launching an augmented reality headset in 2020.

The company took a huge step into AR this year when Apple made its ARkit available to developers, which allowed them to start building AR apps for iOS. Bringing augmented reality apps to millions of iPad and iPhones around the world was a huge first step, but an AR headset would likely be even more pivotal for the company.

The rumored device is expected to have a completely new operating system, called rOS. It's expected to have a new system-on-a-chip (with a CPU, graphics, and artificial intelligence processors) designed by Apple, and will be a stand-alone device that won't require a smartphone to function.

Bloomberg's report came several months after Gene Munster, a longtime Apple analyst who recently started his own venture capital firm, said that Apple was working on a pair of glasses (or headset) that might eventually take the place of the iPhone as the company's cash cow. As Munster noted in June, "In 10 years, we expect the iPhone will be around but be a much smaller part of Apple's business as Apple Glasses slowly gains market adoption."

This is still a long way off, of course, but Apple CEO Tim Cook has made it very clear that his company is expecting big things with augmented reality. On the fiscal fourth-quarter 2017 earnings call, Cook said, "Put simply, we believe AR is going to change the way we use technology forever."