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As you know from our previous news, Samsung's new flagship phones Galaxy S21 will go on sale later this week. The first month of sales will be crucial for the new range, as it will give the tech giant a more accurate idea of ​​what demand to expect in the first quarter. But before that happens, the company has reportedly lowered its expectations compared to last year.

According to reports from South Korea, Samsung estimates that it will deliver a total of 26 million new flagships to the market by the end of this year. The company appears to have adjusted its expectations based on last year's lineup Galaxy S20, which shipped 26 million units last year, which was 9 million less than it estimated. This year, Samsung is said to expect to deliver 10 million units to the market Galaxy S21, 8 million units Galaxy S21+ and another 8 million units Galaxy S21 Ultra.

As you know, deliveries and sales are two different things, although they are related to each other. A company can deliver much more product to stores than it actually sells (not always to its detriment), so the delivery figure is only a rough estimate of how the product will actually do in the market.

As for Samsung and its latest flagship series, the tech giant may have adjusted its supply estimates to avoid overproduction. Perhaps she can no longer afford to flood the market with her products as she used to in the past, and last November there were reports on the air that she wants to monitor demand more carefully and increase production Galaxy S21 as required.

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