Comment That seems to be massively overvalued (Score 2) 31
I mean, this thing does not even have good download-numbers. And a download is not a user.
I mean, this thing does not even have good download-numbers. And a download is not a user.
Nah. You’re not going to go down that route. Your roads are too deadly in their design for a large scale modal shift to micromobility. You’ll just all end up driving ancient giant clunkers and spending a fortune on them. Like all the cars that people drive when they get visited by Secret Santa on East Idaho News. Poverty everywhere, that’s the future, especially when the healthcare costs go shooting up next year.
Can you name 5 cars under 4.2m (165in) in length in the US market? You know, A or B segment cars.
EVs are no more susceptible to remote kill switches than ICE vehicles
We see, and have seen, growth in markets whether or not there were financial incentives, including as those incentives were phased in and out over time. Incentives don’t explain changes in growth rates very well, nor the large differences between countries. When the UK removed incentives in the dog days of the Tory government, growth continued, and it continued after a new incentive was put in place by Labour.
And pretending that the cars aren’t actually being sold is just the weirdest kind of cope. I don’t know where you are in the world, but I’m in London and can promise you that EVs are absolutely commonplace round here, and becoming more and more common over time. Well over a quarter of the cars on my street are EVs now.
If you’re going to argue incentives skew the market, I’m going to argue that the unfunded externalities of ICE vehicles are a massive distortion in favour of their predominance, and if ICE purchasers had to cover the care costs of the associated morbidity and mortality from tailpipe emissions and noise pollution, they would be ruinously expensive (and that of course excludes their major contribution to climate change costs).
Nope. Not even close. This is cope & propaganda taking a word with obvious negative connotations and applying it to a situation where it doesn’t apply to make US consumers, who might otherwise be very happy to see Chinese affordable cars on the US market, accept the protectionism.
Dumping has never meant “offer low prices” or even “offer prices below cost”. Doing the former is fundamental to how markets are supposed to work, and the latter is typically completely acceptable, so much so that we are all familiar with the term loss leader to describe one version of it.
I think the term you and others are groping for is predatory pricing, not dumping. Very hard to prove, though. But even then it doesn’t apply to Chinese companies seeking to win in a new geo, because predatory pricing comprises these three things:
1. Seller has significant market power (e.g., a near-monopoly)
2. They’re doing it with the intent of driving competitors out
3. It is likely to succeed in reducing competition long-term
So it’s an incumbent strategy, not a new entrant strategy.
And than you look at the US doing this crap for far, far longer. Bug-planting by law-enforcement has a long, long tradition in the US. The difference is that in Germany, so far, this was completely illegal for law enforcement. Whether this will stand in Berlin remains to be seen, but I doubt it.
There will be for sure a review by the Bundesverfassungsgericht. So far, the surveillance-fascists always lost.
Do you have trouble with reading comprehension? I specifically answered to "How many countries have banks the size of Credit Suisse?", nothing else. And, as it turns out, that insinuation was complete and utter nonsense.
You are just an asshole trying to move goalposts when your bullshit gets called out. How repulsive.
Why should I follow your cheap manipulation strategy? After I have pointed out your 2nd core argument is bullshit and manipulative, you want me to ignore that one?
You are a complete asshole, nothing else.
USA: 4,453,908 Muslims. Funny. Incidentally, Germany has more Muslims per capita than Switzerland.
And what does LGBTQ rights have to do with whether "Islam has always been an integral part of the Swiss experience"? Are you mentally challenged?
All I see here is that you are full of shit.
I don't know what you think is a better indicator of consumer preference than consumer purchases, which have been increasing year on year and show no sign of slowing.
I don't disagree with any of that, but I don't think it contradicts what I was saying above, where my focus was on the European market, which as you yourself now point out is very different from the US market.
The enthusiasm for electrification among European *OEMs* has waned for several of them, and was never very high to begin with. But not all of them -- eg Renault -- and the enthusiasm among European consumers, as evidenced by sales, continues to grow. After all, market share across Europe for 2025 YTD is about 18%, 4 percentage points higher than 2024. As more non-premium models become available, I expect things to accelerate further. Politicians care more than they should about OEMs and less than they should about consumers, both in the US and Europe.
No, dumpging doesn't mean selling below cost. That's not a definition you'll find in any legal or economic textbook, it's not the definitions used in any laws or treaties, etc. It's a misconception.
Dumping is what I described above. Here's what is written into UK law, for example:
"(2)For the purposes of this Act imported goods shall be regarded as having been dumped—
(a)if the export price from the country of origin is less than the fair market price there (whether the country of exportation is the same or a different country); or
(b)if the export price from the country of exportation (if a different country) is less than the fair market price there"
https://www.legislation.gov.uk... [legislation.gov.uk]
No reference to production costs. All that matters is the export price being less than the fair market price in the country of origin.
"I've seen it. It's rubbish." -- Marvin the Paranoid Android