BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion will launch its new touchscreen smartphone in the US with AT&T on March 22. The release will come several weeks after RIM launched the much-delayed devices elsewhere.

AT&T yesterday said that the Z10 will be available for $199.99 with a two-year contract. Sales of the device began in the UK and Canada shortly after RIM unveiled the phone in late January.

The redesigned BlackBerry is RIM’s attempt at a comeback.

The pioneering brand lost its cachet not long after Apple’s 2007 release of the iPhone, which reset consumers’ expectations for what a smartphone should do.

RIM Chief Executive Thorsten Heins said previously he was disappointed the new BlackBerry would not be released in the US until mid-March, but he said the US and its phone carriers have a rigid testing system.

Heins said last month that the company would have to regain market share in the US for BlackBerry to be successful. The US has been one market in which RIM has been particularly hurt. The iPhone and phones running Google’s Android software now dominate. According to research firm IDC, shipments of BlackBerry phones fell from 46 per cent of the US market in 2008 to 2 per cent in 2012.

Heins also suggested that a modern BlackBerry with a physical keyboard might not arrive in the US until May or June, a month or two behind other parts of the world. Heins said the physical keyboard version, the BlackBerry Q10, will likely come out eight to 10 weeks after a carrier releases a model with only a touch screen, the BlackBerry Z10.

With the Z10 set for release in the US on March 22, eight to 10 weeks brings the US date for the Q10 to mid-May to early June.

Shares jumped $1.32, or 10.1 per cent, to $14.38 in midday trading on the Nasdaq. BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis said the stock move is based a report quoting Lenovo’s chief executive as saying he might be interested in an acquisition of RIM.

But analysts said a Chinese acquisition is unlikely due to security concerns.

RIM’s US release will go up against Samsung’s next Galaxy smartphone which is expected to be unveiled on Thursday.

“If that makes the splash that people think it may, you don’t want to be the guy that’s coming out a week later,” Gillis said.

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