The Morning Call

Samsung says new phones will deliver more, cost less

- By Michael Liedtke

SAN RAMON, Calif. — Samsung’s next crop of smartphone­s will boast bigger screens, better cameras, and longer-lasting batteries at lower prices than last year’s lineup that came out just before the pandemic toppled the economy.

The three Galaxy S21 phones unveiled last week at a virtual event will face some of the same challenges in an economy still hobbled by a crisis that has left millions of people unemployed and forced millions of others to do their jobs or attend school from their homes.

But this time Samsung has made some pricing adjustment­s that reflect the hard times.

All three phones will be less expensive than last year’s comparable models, with reductions ranging from 7% to 20%. Part of the price drops stems from the falling cost for making devices compatible with faster 5G wireless networks, but Samsung also is trying to make its devices more affordable to consumers struggling to make ends meet, said Drew Blackard, the South Korean company’s vice president of product management.

“We are always looking at what is happening in the market and try to be responsive of that,” Blackard said.

Apple also has been offering cheaper versions of the iPhones in recent years, a trend that was amplified last year with the April release of a model selling for $400 and another scaled-down device released last fall that sells for $700 compared with $1,100 for its latest top-of-the-line model.

Samsung quickly learned about how the pandemic might reshape the smartphone market when last year’s Galaxy S20 models hit the stores in the U.S. last March just as lockdowns were shutting down wide swaths of the economy and unemployme­nt rates were soaring to their highest levels since the Great Depression.

The downturn curtailed demand for the Galaxy S20 lineup, contributi­ng to a 29% drop from the previous year in Samsung’s smartphone shipments for the April-June period, according to the research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp. The plunge temporaril­y knocked Samsung from its perch as the world’s leading seller of smartphone­s, but the company reclaimed the mantle from China’s Huawei after its shipments rebounded during the July-September period.

But the slump prompted Samsung to release a lower cost phone, called the Galaxy S20 FE, in October that wasn’t in the company’s original plans last year, Blackard said. That model sold for $700, down from the $1,000 price that Samsung had set for its lower-priced standard Galaxy S20.

In this year’s lineup, the standard Galaxy S21 phone will start at $800, a 20% markdown from last year’s comparable model. The latest Galaxy phone will feature a new design for the camera modules, with more photograph­y options, increased privacy controls and a battery that Samsung promises will last at least a day before it needs to be recharged.

The two other phones have slightly bigger screens in addition to a few other bells and whistles not offered on the basic model. The Galaxy S21 Plus will sell for $1,000, a 17% reduction from last year’s comparable model while the Galaxy S21 Ultra will sell for $1,300, down by $100 from last year’s comparable model.

And the Ultra model will become the first Galaxy S phone capable of working with a Samsung pen that will be sold separately to allow users to digitally draw on the display the screen. The standard S Pen costs $40.

All three phones will be available in stores starting Jan. 29.

 ?? SAMSUNG ?? Samsung’s Galaxy S21 Ultra, above, will cost $1,300, a $100 reduction from a similar model released in 2020. Samsung is cutting prices on its newest lineup of phones.
SAMSUNG Samsung’s Galaxy S21 Ultra, above, will cost $1,300, a $100 reduction from a similar model released in 2020. Samsung is cutting prices on its newest lineup of phones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States