First, the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package moving through the U.S. Congress has some economists and investors worried about inflation, simply because it's a lot of money to dump into the economy. That's almost certainly having an effect.
Second, and likely related, the rate on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bond has risen to 1.37%. That's still quite low by historical standards, but it hasn't been that high since early 2020.
Generally speaking, investors tend to reduce risk exposure when interest rates are rising. The fact that all three of these stocks (and most other EV stocks) have been bid up quite high in recent months by eager investors hoping to replicate the gains posted by Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) makes them prime sell candidates for investors aiming to reduce portfolio volatility now.
Third, and also related, Tesla has fallen quite a bit over the last few days. It's the category leader, so it's not surprising to see other electric-vehicle stocks falling as well.All that said, nothing about these external events changes the longer-term fundamentals of any of these companies. If you believed in them a month ago, and you plan to hold long-term, there's no urgent reason to sell.
www.nasdaq.com/articles/...are-trading-lower-today-2021-02-23
nicht zuletzt weil Bitcoins fielen in die Musk Milliarden investiert hat