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News Electric Cars Hit a Wall in the U.S. Market

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The U.S. auto market is hitting a turning point as electric vehicle momentum starts to slow. Major automakers are delaying EV rollouts and shifting focus back to hybrids due to high costs and weaker-than-expected demand. At the same time, new affordable electric models are being introduced to win back buyers, showing the market is far from stable. Industry experts now warn that the EV transition will take longer than predicted, with hybrids playing a bigger role in the near future.

Is the electric revolution losing steam, or just getting a reality check?
 
The U.S. auto market is hitting a turning point as electric vehicle momentum starts to slow. Major automakers are delaying EV rollouts and shifting focus back to hybrids due to high costs and weaker-than-expected demand. At the same time, new affordable electric models are being introduced to win back buyers, showing the market is far from stable. Industry experts now warn that the EV transition will take longer than predicted, with hybrids playing a bigger role in the near future.

Is the electric revolution losing steam, or just getting a reality check?

This feels less like EVs failing and more like the hype finally meeting reality. The technology is solid, but pricing, infrastructure, and charging times are still holding a lot of buyers back. Hybrids stepping in makes total sense they’re the safe middle ground while the EV ecosystem catches up.
At the same time, automakers overpromised and rushed timelines, so now they’re being forced to adjust. This isn’t a collapse, it’s a correction.
The real question is: when EVs finally become truly affordable and convenient, will buyers come back or has the trust already been shaken?
 
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