Under the current market environment, the stock of a certain new energy vehicle company faces multiple pressures, and the investment outlook is worrying. Worsening tariff conditions directly increase costs, while supply chain risks in the commodities sector (especially geopolitical control over key materials like silver) further compress profit margins. More importantly, the contraction of government subsidy policies is eroding industry policy benefits, while market demand remains weak and new car sales are sluggish. These factors combined make it difficult for this asset to gain upward momentum in the short term. For investors seeking risk-adjusted returns, a wait-and-see approach may be more prudent.

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defi_detectivevip
· 01-09 11:40
The selling pressure is so high, with tariffs + supply chain + subsidy cuts—this combination is indeed quite aggressive... It's really tough to get a handle on the new energy sector right now.
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BlockTalkvip
· 01-09 11:07
Damn it, it's the same old story. Once the policy subsidies are withdrawn, everything is doomed. I've seen it coming a long time ago. --- This pit of new energy, without subsidies, it's nothing. Now you understand, right? --- Tariffs + supply chain, double kill. I won't touch this stock. --- Let's wait and see. If you get in now, you'll just be the bagholder. --- Weak sales + rising costs, who can handle this combo skill? --- Geopolitical choke points, silver is really the key to life and death. --- Subsidy cuts are like a mirror that reveals the true form, one by one. --- No hope in the short term. I'd rather play something else.
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GweiWatchervip
· 01-08 10:54
The new energy sector has indeed been hit hard, with tariffs + supply chain + subsidy reductions, the triple blow is really hard to withstand.
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BuyHighSellLowvip
· 01-08 01:00
Subsidies are gone, costs are rising again, and sales can't keep up... This round is indeed a bit uncertain.
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FlyingLeekvip
· 01-06 20:53
Honestly, the new energy sector now is just about who can run faster. Without subsidies, the true nature is exposed. --- Geopolitical choke points, rising costs, and sales haven't picked up... I’m very familiar with this rhythm. --- Waiting and watching? I’ve already cut losses and waited, haha. --- Tariffs, supply chains, subsidies all collapsing. What’s left to rise? --- I just want to ask, can this wave still rebound? I don’t have that much patience. --- It feels like the new energy track is about to be reshuffled. Weak companies can’t hold on. --- Selling cars isn’t profitable, and now they’re being betrayed by geopolitics. Ridiculous.
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YieldChaservip
· 01-06 20:52
The new energy sector is indeed a bit shaky; once the policy subsidies taper off, the truth will be revealed.
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AlwaysAnonvip
· 01-06 20:42
Subsidies are gone, and sales are also disappointing. How to hype it up? Maybe wait and see.
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zkNoobvip
· 01-06 20:36
The new energy sector is indeed a bit precarious; once subsidies are cut off, the true situation is exposed. --- Tariffs, supply chains, and sales all collapse... who can withstand this? --- I need to see how silver prices move; otherwise, this pond is too murky. --- No motivation in the short term, maybe wait and see? Or keep lying low. --- Without policy dividends, it all depends on real skills, but it still doesn't seem enough. --- Hey, isn't this just the prelude to cutting leeks... Hold on +1. --- Rising costs and declining sales, just a math problem—whoever buys gets caught.
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NeverPresentvip
· 01-06 20:33
Subsidies shrink, and the true nature is revealed—this is the fate of new energy. To put it simply, it's all about policies; they have little competitiveness of their own. With dual blows from tariffs and supply chain issues, profit margins are squeezed to the point of no return. Who would still dare to take over? Waiting and seeing? I've been waiting and seeing for a long time; anyway, this deal can't escape. Let's wait and see if there's a black swan event. Acting now makes you the sucker who takes over.
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HallucinationGrowervip
· 01-06 20:32
Subsidies once withdrawn, the true nature is revealed. This is the real competitiveness.
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