The
new flagship Galaxy S5 will capture the spotlight, but cheaper
smartphones for emerging regions could really make a difference for
Samsung this year.
Samsung's Galaxy S5
The Korean electronics giant on Monday unveiled its newest flagship phone with all -- or at least most -- of the bells and whistles that consumers have come to expect. The device, with a fingerprint scanner and heart rate sensor, is sure to attract plenty of buyers in developed markets like the US and Western Europe. However, it's the cheaper smartphones for emerging regions that could really make a big difference for Samsung this year.
Increasingly, the battleground for mobile won't be waged on the streets of New York or London but in the alleys of Beijing and Mumbai. The market for low-end phones should grow about 17 percent each year through 2018 while the high-end smartphone segment -- the category the Galaxy S5 calls home, along with Apple's iPhone -- will increase only 4 percent annually, according to ARM Holdings, the chip company whose technology powers most of the mobile devices in the world. In mature regions, the biggest markets for high-end phones, essentially everyone who wants a smartphone has one.
"There's no question that emerging markets will provide a very large growth opportunity for mobile," Cristiano Amon, Qualcomm's president of mobile and computing, told CNET.
However, it's also seeing more competition from mobile up-and-comers such as Huawei, Lenovo, and Xiaomi. Right now those companies are gaining in China, but they also have plans to aggressively expand outside their home country. Lenovo, for one, will do that partly through its Motorola acquisition. That's something that should have Samsung worried.
"Samsung is still doing fairly well in most emerging markets," Jackdaw Research analyst Jan Dawson said. "But it's not growing share in most markets, just holding onto its position."
The Galaxy S5 comes in five colors.
"We're open for business on Windows Phone to anyone who wants to build a Windows Phone," said Nick Parker, the Microsoft executive who handles the company's relationship with hardware companies.
Of course, selling a bigger percentage of lower-priced phones than high-end devices comes with its own problems. The volumes will be much higher, but handset vendors don't make as much from those cheaper devices. Apple, in a bid to protect its high level of profitability, has decided not to play in low-end or even midrange devices, at least for now.
Samsung won't be following the same strategy as Apple, but it will have to decide just how far it's willing to go. The company's first course of business this year will be getting the Galaxy S5 into the market and convincing consumers that its tweaks are worth the upgrade. But after that, emerging markets await.
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