What Is a Short Squeeze? | The Motley Fool (2024)

Most stock market participants invest using buy-and-hold strategies, aiming to identify strong companies with bright, long-term futures.

What Is a Short Squeeze? | The Motley Fool (1)

Image source: The Motley Fool

But Wall Street uses numerous, more creative strategies to speculate on stock movements. Even as a buy-and-hold investor, there will be times when the prices of stocks you own are influenced by what other investors are doing rather than by the company's underlying business fundamentals. One such phenomena, the "short squeeze," has the potential to make a stock's price rocket much higher overnight.

What is it?

A short squeeze happens when many investors short a stock (bet against it) but the stock's price shoots up instead.

Let's say an investor believes that shares of NoGood Co. are overvalued at their current share price of $100, then that investor can borrow someone else's shares of NoGood and immediately sell them to another buyer -- again, for $100. Of course, you can't simply sell what you don't own with no consequences -- at some point, those borrowed shares have to be returned. When that day comes, the investor needs to buy shares in the market to be able to return them to the lender. If the investor is correct and the share price has indeed declined, let's say to $70, then the investor will make $30 in profit. They sold borrowed shares for $100, repurchased them for $70, returned the shares, and pocketed the difference.

If the shares of NoGood instead increase in price, then the short seller is at risk of losing a very large amount of money on the trade. (Unlike price declines, which are capped when the share price reaches $0, price hikes are theoretically limitless.) If a stock's price rises quickly, then short sellers sometimes scramble to close out their positions as rapidly as possible. A high volume of investors who are shorting a stock and racing to exit their positions at the same time creates a short squeeze. The sudden surge in demand to buy shares of a stock can send the stock's price even higher.

If, for example, NoGood Co. reported better-than-expected earnings and its stock price jumped to $120, then panicked short-sellers might rush to close out their positions before the share price kept climbing. This sudden high demand could cause the stock's price to rise even more sharply to $130 or $140 per share. The dramatic jump in price "squeezes" those who shorted the stock.

Example

One of the biggest short squeezes of all time: Volkswagen

One of the most notable short squeezes in recent history centers on the stock of European automaker Volkswagen (VWAGY -0.55%). In 2008, Volkswagen saw its stock price jump by more than 300% in a matter of days, briefly making the company seemingly worth more than $400 billion -- above the valuation of any other public company at the time.

In Volkswagen's case, a number of factors contributed to the squeeze. Holding company Porsche SE owned a big chunk of the shares, and the German government also owned a large stake, meaning that relatively few shares were actually traded in the public market. There was ample speculation that Porsche would buy the rest of Volkswagen.

What Is a Short Squeeze? | The Motley Fool (2)

VWAGY data by YCharts

In October 2008, amid the broader financial crisis that caused most every stock to trade down, Volkswagen's stock continued to trade higher. Those who didn't think a deal with Porsche would happen, or were buying Volkswagen stock to hedge another investment, shorted the automaker's stock, assuming that its price would fall eventually.

But Porsche surprised the market by putting out a statement: It had been building its stake in Volkswagen via options, meaning that only about 6% of Volkswagen's shares remained in the open market. That's a danger sign for short sellers who need shares to be available to exit their positions. The Porsche statement caused short sellers to rush for the exits, creating a massive spike in demand for the relatively few Volkswagen shares still available. With extremely high demand and little supply, the stock's price soared.

How to spot one

How to find the next short squeeze

The kindling needed to start a short squeeze is a stock for which many investors hold short positions.

Most online brokerages and stock data websites provide information indicating, for each publicly traded company, the number of shares sold short and the total number of shares outstanding. To find the percentage of shares being shorted, divide the number of shares sold short by the total number of shares outstanding and then multiply by 100. Although company size and the number of shares available can be relevant factors, companies with more than 25% to 30% of their shares sold short could be prime candidates for a short squeeze. But the numbers can be deceiving since there are technical reasons that can enable a single share to be shorted more than once. This distortion can lead to a stock's shorting percentage being inflated.

A few words of caution: Generally speaking, heavily shorted stocks are heavily shorted for a reason. Likely valid reasons are what caused a large number of investors to bet on a stock's price going down. Be cautious about establishing any position in a heavily shorted stock. At the very least, study up on the company and evaluate the reasons some are choosing to bet against it.

Also, looking at the Volkswagen chart above, notice the price went down nearly as fast as it went up. By the end of 2008, the stock's price was basically back to where it started before the squeeze.

Even in a best-case scenario, a short squeeze is a quick occurrence -- not a long-term strategy. Buying into a company in the hope of lassoing a rocketing price is speculative at best. Not all stocks with high short interest get squeezed.

A short squeeze may seem exciting, but the more reliable way to get rich is to identify and buy strong companies and hold them for as long as possible.

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Expert Q&A

Expert Q&A

The Motley Fool had a chance to connect with an expert on shorting: Sofia Johan, an associate professor in the finance department of FAU's College of Business.

What Is a Short Squeeze? | The Motley Fool (3)

Sofia Johan, associate professor in the finance department of FAU's College of Business. Her areas of expertise and research interest include legal and ethical issues in financial markets, entrepreneurial finance, and regulation of financial markets around the world.

The Motley Fool: As we saw with GameStop in January 2021, when forces align, a stock's price can rocket higher, causing a "short squeeze." That said, do you anticipate any trends in the future as more of these phenomena are fueled by the internet and social media?

Johan: I expect that there will be greater oversight on naked shorts. This is especially relevant as many retail investors do not fully understand the trading process. In a typical short sale, a seller will either directly or go through an intermediary to borrow the shares to deliver to the buyer. When prices go down (hopefully) the seller will buy shares at a lower price to deliver to lender or to close out. The short squeeze resulting from prices going up is one issue, but there also are other risks, such as difficulty in borrowing the shares. Some intermediaries have access to client accounts, such as Mutual Funds, or other Institutions that tend to keep their stock holdings stable. But as demand to borrow increases, then the lending cost may increase, or some intermediaries get preferential treatment. This potentially increases levels of naked shorts, where the seller does not intend to deliver the shares.

Lou Whiteman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Volkswagen Ag. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

What Is a Short Squeeze? | The Motley Fool (2024)

FAQs

What is a short squeeze easily explained? ›

A short squeeze occurs when a stock moves higher and short sellers decide to cover their short positions or are forced to do so via margin calls. As these short sellers buy the stock, the price rises, potentially creating a situation in which more shorts have to cover.

What is a good short ratio for a squeeze? ›

The higher the ratio, the higher the likelihood short sellers will help drive the price up. A short interest ratio of five or better is a good indicator that short sellers might panic, and this may be a good time to try to trade a potential short squeeze.

What is the mother of all short squeezes? ›

MOASS, meaning the Mother of All Short Squeezes, as noted, is a trading strategy in which a high volume of buyers drive up shares of stocks that were being “shorted” by other investors.

What was the most successful short squeeze? ›

  • What are short squeezes? ...
  • The greatest short squeezes of all time. ...
  • 1923: Piggly Wiggly short squeeze. ...
  • 2008: Volkswagen vs Porsche. ...
  • The big short on Herbalife. ...
  • 2020: Tesla stock price rally. ...
  • 2021: The GameStop surge.

What is the best indicator for a short squeeze? ›

Two popular indicators used to identify a short squeeze are the relative strength index (RSI) and stochastic oscillator, both of which are available on our online trading platform, Next Generation.

What usually happens after a short squeeze? ›

A short squeeze accelerates a stock's price rise as short sellers bail out to cut their losses. Contrarian investors try to anticipate a short squeeze and buy stocks that demonstrate a strong short interest. Both short sellers and contrarians make risky moves.

How to tell a short squeeze is coming? ›

Signs of a Short Squeeze

These are: An asset trading near its 52-week lows and the price is much lower than the fair value estimated by experts. The reasons for the gap may be many, but markets eventually correct and settle closer to the fair value.

How many days to cover is good for a short squeeze? ›

Days to Cover in Practice

Given the current level of trading activity, it would take approximately five trading days for all the short sellers to cover their positions, i.e., to buy back the stocks they have shorted.

How do you make money on a short squeeze? ›

A short squeeze occurs when a heavily shorted stock begins to move higher, prompting short sellers to cover their positions by buying some or all of the shares they previously borrowed and sold, which in turn pushes the stock price even higher.

How long does a short squeeze usually last? ›

In general, short squeezes tend to last somewhere between several days and several months. There is no real “typical” length for a short squeeze, as each one is unique.

How high did GameStop go during the short squeeze? ›

As of January 28, 2021, the all-time highest intraday stock price for GameStop was $483.00 (nearly 190 times the low of $2.57 reached 9 months earlier in April 2020).

What is the most heavily shorted stocks? ›

These Are the 5 Most Heavily Shorted Stocks on the NYSE
Top 5 Most-Shorted NYSE Stocks
CompanyTicker SymbolShort Interest
Albemarle CorporationALB13.25%
Builders FirstSource, Inc.BLDR11.82%
Dayforce IncDAY11.25%
2 more rows
12 hours ago

How do you tell if a stock is being short squeezed? ›

Measuring a short squeeze can involve a metric called the short interest ratio, a.k.a. "days to cover." It indicates, in days, how long it would take to cover or buy back all the shorted shares. Basically, you divide the number of shares sold short by the average daily trading volume.

What are the risks of a short squeeze? ›

A short squeeze is a bullish market response. Successful short squeezes can cause short sellers to lose a lot of money. However, this action causes the stocks price to skyrocket. This creates what is referred to as a stock squeeze or a squeeze from the pressure of short sellers being forced to exit the position.

Why is a short squeeze illegal? ›

Short squeezes are a natural occurrence in the stock market, but market manipulation is illegal. As the SEC says, “abusive short sale practices are illegal,” and that may play into short squeezes.

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