I know some of you here would have loved to see your $100 equipment to be as performant as $1000+ equipment just because Amir's testing has proven that the manufacturers of such equipment have designed their products in accordance with the components in these said products, but that's never the case in our capitalistic world. In our world, things tend to be priced in accordance to their worth. But, no disrespect, we can always dream that my $22K USD Klipschhorns sound the same as your no name brand $100 speakers just because Amir measured its SINAD to be among the best here.
This doesn't really hold up under examination. If you are looking at a market like PC components, sure, price and performance have a very strong correlation because the market is mostly driven by objective testing data. Speed is everything.
The market of people who buy audio equipment based on objective measurements is a rather small subsect of the greater audio gear buying public, even in the audiophile market. Performance and price don't have much of a correlation in this context. I mean, we can all agree that a pair of $400 apple or beats headphones won't sound as good a $200 pair of Sennheisers or Hifiman headphones. When you buy a pair of Beats you're paying for a lot more than the headphones, particularly the advertising apparatus that made you want to buy them in the first place. That gives a company like Topping a big advantage in terms of pricing because they aren't sinking a ton of money into expensive media campaigns. They basically sell their products based on measurements, more or less directly to consumers.
Additionally, the tendency under capitalist competition is to try to produce a product that is better and less expensive than your competitors. Smart producers will always undercut the competition on price if their superior product costs less to produce.
Remember when Sony and Pioneer started exporting receivers in the 60s they weren't taken seriously at first but they eventually began producing stereos that were objectively better than American ones and within a couple years American companies were mimicking Japanese design.
And I bet my $2200 Revels sound as good as your $22k Klipschhorns.