XPENG

XPENG-W 09868.HK Price

XPENG
$0
+$0(0.00%)
No data

*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 15:57 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 15:57, XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) is priced at $0, with a total market cap of --, a P/E ratio of 0.00, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $0 and $0. The current price is 0.00% above the day's low and 0.00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of --. Over the past 52 weeks, XPENG has traded between $0 to $0, and the current price is 0.00% away from the 52-week high.

XPENG Key Stats

P/E Ratio0.00
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Shares Outstanding0.00

XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) FAQ

What's the stock price of XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) today?

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XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) is currently trading at $0, with a 24h change of 0.00%. The 52-week trading range is $0–$0.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)?

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What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)? What does it indicate?

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What is the market cap of XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)?

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What is the most recent quarterly earnings per share (EPS) for XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)?

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Should you buy or sell XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) now?

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What factors can affect the stock price of XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)?

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How to buy XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) stock?

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XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG) Latest News

2026-04-24 09:01Xpeng, Xiaomi Lead In-Car AI Push at Beijing Auto ShowGate News message, April 24 — Chinese automakers showcased advanced in-car AI systems at the Beijing Auto Show on April 24, as the country accelerates its AI Plus strategy and seeks greater independence from foreign semiconductors. Xpeng demonstrated voice-controlled parking that allows drivers to issue spoken commands instead of manually selecting locations. Xiaomi upgraded its car operating system with AI capabilities for tasks including reservations and note-taking. Huawei announced plans to invest more than $10 billion in smart driving technology, while Horizon Robotics unveiled a processor combining cockpit and autonomous driving functions. Xpeng's in-house Turing chip reportedly delivers three times the processing power of Nvidia's Orin processors currently deployed in its vehicles. The push reflects intensifying U.S. export controls on advanced AI chips and China's efforts to develop domestic semiconductor alternatives, driving efficiency gains across the industry.2026-04-21 04:56Gate TradFi Stocks section launches with trading pairs IWM, VOO, IVV, and XPENG; supports 4x fixed leverageGate News update: [Gate TradFi](https://www.gate.com/zh/tradfi) Stocks section is now live, offering four stock CFD trading pairs—IWM (Russell 2000 ETF), VOO (S&P 500 ETF—Vanguard), IVV (S&P 500 ETF—iShares), and XPENG (XPeng Inc.—W 09868.HK). All pairs support 4x fixed leverage, with a minimum order size of 0.1. This section covers CFD derivatives trading for traditional financial assets. Users can trade in the [[TradFi](https://www.gate.com/tradfi)](https://www.gate.com/zh/tradfi) TradFi section on the Gate platform.2026-03-26 08:00TradFi Fall Alert: XPEV (XPeng) Falls Over 4%Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, XPEV (XPeng) has dropped by 4% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.2026-03-23 17:33TradFi Rise Alert: XPEV (XPeng) Rises Over 6%Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, XPEV (XPeng) has surged by 6% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.2026-03-20 13:40TradFi Fall Alert: XPEV (XPeng) Falls Over 6%Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, XPEV (XPeng) has dropped by 6% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.

Hot Posts About XPENG-W 09868.HK (XPENG)

SmartMoneyWallet

SmartMoneyWallet

2 hours ago
After the U.S. stock market crash, I started to reflect on one question: why did assets shrink so quickly? To be honest, most interpretations in the market are nonsense. Things like AI disrupting software stocks, concerns about Google’s earnings report, and the Fed Chair’s hawkish leaning are all excuses invented after the fact. Analysts are the best at this—when the market falls, they rush to concoct stories, burying the real operating logic under noise. I had already cleared out my crypto assets in advance, but that knife in stocks still got me. Positions like Figma and XPeng dropped so badly they were almost unbearable to watch, with losses exceeding 70%. Only later did I understand that the real culprits behind this U.S. stock market crash were not fundamentals, but two things: overvaluation and tight liquidity. First, let’s talk about valuation. The Buffett Indicator is now at 230%. What does that mean? This guy considers 75%-90% a reasonable range; anything above 120% is playing with fire. And we’re basically doubling it now. The S&P 500’s forward P/E of 22x is far above the 30-year average, already approaching levels from the internet bubble period. With valuations like this, the moment the market gets so much as a whiff of change, institutional profit-taking flows out in a rush. But high valuation alone wouldn’t be enough to cause a collapse outright—the real destructive force comes from a sudden tightening of liquidity. It’s like you’re in a tall building: the stronger the wind, the more violently your body sways. First is the jump in the yield on Japanese government bonds. Japan maintained near-zero interest rates for a long time, which fueled massive yen carry trades. Global investors borrow yen at low cost and put it into high-yield assets like U.S. stocks. Once Japanese bond yields rise rapidly, the appeal of carry trades disappears—and in some cases, it even starts to produce losses. Then a large-scale wave of de-risking and position unwinds comes in. Investors sell overseas assets to exchange them for yen to repay loans, and this process directly triggers global deleveraging. Second is the U.S. Treasury’s TGA account. When this account is high, it’s like withdrawing funds from the financial system: bank reserves fall, and liquidity tightens. In the past few months, the TGA balance stayed near a peak of almost $900 billion. The Treasury also planned to issue a large amount of new debt—like pulling the rug out from under things, forcing financial institutions to deleverage and sell assets. On top of that, there are the CME’s consecutive interventions. During the precious metals crash, CME raised futures margin requirements 6 times in a row. Silver’s initial margin was increased from 11% to 18%. For long positions that have already been hit brutally, this is like adding insult to injury—directly triggering stampede-style liquidations. So, at its core, this U.S. stock market crash is the inevitable result of a worsening liquidity environment. High valuation only increases the magnitude of volatility; liquidity is the trigger point. After that, I began focusing on several liquidity indicators. Net liquidity (the Federal Reserve’s total assets minus TGA minus the overnight reverse repo) is a directional indicator of cash available to the market—when it moves downward, you need to be cautious. An abnormal rise in SOFR rates indicates that short-term funding is getting more expensive, and the market is more prone to volatility. When the MOVE index (U.S. Treasury volatility) rises, it means interest rate volatility is intensifying—leverage falls, and risk assets are more likely to drop passively. You also need to watch USDJPY and the U.S.-Japan 2-year yield spread; this is the key to judging whether yen carry deleveraging has started. When high-yield credit spreads widen, it signals financing conditions are deteriorating, making declines in risk assets more likely to spread. My strategy now is that, besides watching company fundamentals and the Fed’s stance, I spend even more time monitoring these liquidity signals. Because in an environment with such high valuations, any gust of change in liquidity can trigger violent swings in the market. What the U.S. stock market crash taught me is that the power of macro liquidity is far greater than you might think.
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