Interesting market signal here: EV sales just nosedived the moment government subsidies got pulled. Makes you wonder how "organic" that demand really was.
When an entire sector's growth depends on taxpayer money propping it up, what happens when the training wheels come off? We're seeing the answer in real-time.
This isn't just about cars—it's about understanding market fundamentals versus artificially stimulated growth. Something worth keeping in mind across all asset classes when policy winds shift.
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SignatureVerifier
· 19h ago
subsidy withdrawal reveals insufficient demand validation—classic case of policy masking fundamental market weakness. training wheels off, the infrastructure crumbles. questions whether similar dependencies lurk across other sectors too.
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EternalMiner
· 12-03 12:33
As soon as the subsidies are withdrawn, everything collapses. What does this indicate? ... It shows that real demand simply can't hold up.
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ImpermanentLossEnjoyer
· 12-02 09:13
Once the subsidies are withdrawn, the market reveals its true nature, indicating that the real demand simply cannot withstand the test.
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LightningSentry
· 12-02 09:05
Once the subsidy is revoked, sales will fall sharply, what does it indicate... It just indicates that this demand is false.
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AlphaWhisperer
· 12-02 08:59
With the subsidy pump, sales just fall straight down... this is what I've always wanted to say.
Interesting market signal here: EV sales just nosedived the moment government subsidies got pulled. Makes you wonder how "organic" that demand really was.
When an entire sector's growth depends on taxpayer money propping it up, what happens when the training wheels come off? We're seeing the answer in real-time.
This isn't just about cars—it's about understanding market fundamentals versus artificially stimulated growth. Something worth keeping in mind across all asset classes when policy winds shift.