J.K. Shin, head of the mobile division of Samsung Electronics, speaks
during a media event for the Samsung Galaxy S6 at the company's
headquarters in Seoul on April 9, 2015. Samsung said it expected its new
flagship smartphone to shatter sales records and pull the company out
of a recent profit slump that saw it lose ground to arch-rival Apple and
cheaper Chinese makers. PHOTO | AFP
SEOUL,
Samsung
said Thursday it expected its new flagship smartphone to shatter sales
records and pull the company out of a recent profit slump that saw it
lose ground to arch-rival Apple and cheaper Chinese makers.
The Galaxy S6 is the sixth edition of the South Korean electronics giant's high-end, signature handset.
Along
with its curved-edge variant, the Galaxy S6 Edge, the S6 will hit
stores at home and in some 20 countries, including the United States,
Singapore, India and Australia on Friday.
Unveiled
in March, the two phones have received rave reviews — fanning hopes of a
big comeback for Samsung after the much-criticised Galaxy S5 largely
flopped last year.
People walks past a billboard showing the
Samsung Galaxy S6 during a media event at the company's headquarters in
Seoul on April 9, 2015. PHOTO | AFP
"Given
the response from the market and clients ... we expect the S6 to set a
sales record for all Galaxy models," Lee Sang-Chul, the vice head of
Samsung's mobile unit, told reporters.
LOST GROUND
Samsung
rarely discloses handset sales figures but the Galaxy S4 — released in
2013 — is known to have set the firm's sales record of 70 million units
globally.
The firm suffered a
dramatic slide in profits last year, hit by slowing demand in an
increasingly saturated and competitive smartphone market that it had
largely dominated since 2011.
The
company struggled to fend off a double challenge from Apple in the
high-end market and rising Chinese firms such as Lenovo and Xiaomi in
the fast-growing mid and low-end markets.
Samsung
hopes the S6 will re-establish it as the clear global smartphone market
leader over Apple, which has enjoyed blockbuster sales of its iPhone 6,
launched last September.
Several
market trackers had Apple and Samsung tied in global smartphone sales in
the fourth quarter of 2014, while at least one suggested Apple had
regained the throne it lost to Samsung in 2011.
Signs
that Samsung was beginning to turn things around were confirmed
Wednesday when it released a better-than-expected profit estimate for
the first quarter.
Its forecast of an
operating profit of 5.9 trillion won ($5.4 billion) was down 30.5
percent from a year ago, but beat average analyst expectations of around
5.5 trillion won, and was up 11.5 percent from the previous quarter.
Visitors look at the Samsung Galaxy S6 during a media event at the company's headquarters in Seoul on April 9, 2015. PHOTO | AFP
SHORT SUPPLY
The
S6 and the Edge — powered by Google's Android operating platform —
feature metal and glass bodies in a break from their plastic-backed
predecessors.
The head of the
company's mobile unit J.K. Shin said the complex production process for
the curved S6 Edge meant it might be difficult to meet initial demand.
"I think there will be some supply shortage for a while although we're trying our best," he said.
Both
new handsets allow users to recharge wirelessly by placing them on a
charging pad. A 10-minute recharge provides an extra four hours of use.
Users will also be able to make mobile payments in a service similar to the Apple Pay feature available on iPhone 6.
Samsung said the Samsung Pay service would be launched first in South Korea in July.
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