Koh
Dong-jin, president of Samsung's handsets business, did not give
a figure or disclose sales targets during a press briefing for
the phones, which go on sale in South Korea and other markets on
Friday.
But he said Samsung expects the S7s to help revive sales in
China, the world's top smartphone market where researchers say
the Korean firm is lagging its competitors.
The Galaxy S7s offer incremental upgrades, leading some analysts
to predict sales in the first year will be weaker than last
year's Galaxy S6s.
(Reporting by Se Young Lee; Editing by Miral Fahmy)
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