RE: TROLL AGENDA6 Mar 2023 20:34
The below happens regularly here...
. High short volume, low short interest.
These numbers must be reported accurately to financial regulators. They can’t hide the overall short interest in the long run. But what they can do is cover their short before the short interest is reported.
This becomes obvious when short volume is high, say 45%, but total short interest is low, say 3%.
If 45% of a stock’s volume is people borrowing and selling, then you’d expect the total short interest to be huge.
But it’s not. They hide it by covering their short position before the day is over.
So, if you notice a large amount of volume before the end of the day, or right at the bell…some of that volume is the shorts covering their position so they don’t increase the overall short interest and draw the attention of investors/short squeezers.