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ARM Short Squeeze Risk Tracker: Data and Analysis

Last Updated: 2025-11-28

Access the latest ARM short interest history, Days to Cover (DTC) trend, and the proprietary Short Squeeze Score for risk assessment.

Short Squeeze Risk Assessment

ARM Short Squeeze Score

0.37

Low short squeeze potential. Selling pressure is manageable, and the stock is not a primary target.

The Squeeze Score quantifies the current short squeeze risk by analyzing short interest, Days to Cover, and market liquidity. Use this score to quickly identify the most shorted stocks with the highest squeeze potential.

  • 0.0–0.2: Very low short squeeze risk.
  • 0.2–0.4: Low short squeeze potential.
  • 0.4–0.6: Moderate short squeeze risk.
  • 0.6–0.8: High short squeeze risk.
  • 0.8–1.0: Extreme short squeeze risk.

Short Interest Ratio (% of Float)

10.46%

The Short Interest Ratio (or % of Float) is the most critical metric for identifying the most shorted stocks. It reflects the percentage of available trading shares currently sold short.

Interpretation:

  • 0%–5%: Very low short interest, minimal squeeze risk.
  • 5%–10%: Moderate short interest, watch for trends.
  • 10%–20%: High short interest, potential for squeeze.
  • >20%: Extremely high, short squeeze risk elevated.

Key Short Selling Metrics

Total Short Interest Shares
14,206,776
Shares sold short as of 2025-11-28

High short interest, indicating significant bearish sentiment.

Days to Cover (DTC)
3.82

Short interest ÷ average daily volume.

It would take 2 to 5 days to cover short positions, posing moderate risk.

Bi-weekly Change in Short Interest
6.89%
915360
Vs previous report.

Moderate increase in short interest, potential buildup of pressure.

Historical Data Coverage
54

Bi-weekly observations in the stored history.

High coverage with extensive historical data, trends are more reliable for analysis.

Short Interest Historical Charts

Explore the short interest trend, bi-weekly changes, and Days to Cover (DTC). Use the range selector to view different historical windows.

Short Interest (Total Shares)


Bi-Weekly Change (%)


Days to Cover (DTC)

Full Short Interest History (FINRA Bi-Weekly)

Complete FINRA bi-weekly short interest history for ARM.
This table includes total short interest, prior period values, percentage change,average daily volume, and Days to Cover (DTC), a key indicator of potential short squeeze risk.
Date Short Interest Prior Change % Change # Avg Volume DTC
2025-11-28 14,206,776 13,291,416 6.89% 915,360 3,715,836 3.82
2025-11-14 13,291,416 13,377,478 -0.64% -86,062 4,560,596 2.91
2025-10-31 13,377,478 14,377,672 -6.96% -1,000,194 3,960,276 3.38
2025-10-15 14,377,672 16,281,553 -11.69% -1,903,881 7,372,252 1.95
2025-09-30 16,281,553 15,021,853 8.39% 1,259,700 4,881,556 3.34
2025-09-15 15,021,853 15,242,896 -1.45% -221,043 4,298,278 3.49
2025-08-29 15,242,896 15,409,754 -1.08% -166,858 3,471,218 4.39
2025-08-15 15,409,754 16,241,218 -5.12% -831,464 4,439,880 3.47
2025-07-31 16,241,218 16,307,272 -0.41% -66,054 5,919,576 2.74
2025-07-15 16,307,272 18,315,628 -10.97% -2,008,356 4,583,544 3.56
2025-06-30 18,315,628 17,482,844 4.76% 832,784 4,942,635 3.71
2025-06-13 17,482,844 16,018,652 9.14% 1,464,192 3,688,781 4.74
2025-05-30 16,018,652 16,870,582 -5.05% -851,930 4,641,042 3.45
2025-05-15 16,870,582 15,091,253 11.79% 1,779,329 7,158,495 2.36
2025-04-30 15,091,253 16,562,497 -8.88% -1,471,244 3,854,771 3.91
2025-04-15 16,562,497 13,332,178 24.23% 3,230,319 7,222,069 2.29
2025-03-31 13,332,178 13,233,338 0.75% 98,840 3,571,613 3.73
2025-03-14 13,233,338 14,830,787 -10.77% -1,597,449 6,031,925 2.19
2025-02-28 14,830,787 16,304,756 -9.04% -1,473,969 4,488,097 3.30
2025-02-14 16,304,756 14,734,641 10.66% 1,570,115 6,724,105 2.42
2025-01-31 14,734,641 12,387,150 18.95% 2,347,491 8,831,873 1.67
2025-01-15 12,387,150 13,026,486 -4.91% -639,336 4,568,347 2.71
2024-12-31 13,026,486 12,439,763 4.72% 586,723 4,639,585 2.81
2024-12-13 12,439,763 14,859,960 -16.29% -2,420,197 4,635,785 2.68
2024-11-29 14,859,960 13,911,082 6.82% 948,878 4,025,368 3.69
2024-11-15 13,911,082 14,474,219 -3.89% -563,137 6,644,266 2.09
2024-10-31 14,474,219 14,409,268 0.45% 64,951 5,404,619 2.68
2024-10-15 14,409,268 14,528,965 -0.82% -119,697 5,138,175 2.80
2024-09-30 14,528,965 13,559,656 7.15% 969,309 6,084,118 2.39
2024-09-13 13,559,656 13,416,874 1.06% 142,782 7,125,958 1.90
2024-08-30 13,416,874 17,272,467 -22.32% -3,855,593 6,175,650 2.17
2024-08-15 17,272,467 15,508,701 11.37% 1,763,766 12,259,579 1.41
2024-07-31 15,508,701 13,960,518 11.09% 1,548,183 10,044,334 1.54
2024-07-15 13,960,518 12,893,972 8.27% 1,066,546 8,518,341 1.64
2024-06-28 12,893,972 10,914,098 18.14% 1,979,874 13,933,634 1.00
2024-06-14 10,914,098 10,077,367 8.30% 836,731 12,068,783 1.00
2024-05-31 10,077,367 8,473,567 18.93% 1,603,800 8,245,553 1.22
2024-05-15 8,473,567 7,692,422 10.15% 781,145 11,296,442 1.00
2024-04-30 7,692,422 8,370,719 -8.10% -678,297 11,007,579 1.00
2024-04-15 8,360,719 8,189,547 2.09% 171,172 5,848,692 1.43
2024-03-28 8,189,547 7,928,779 3.29% 260,768 9,770,996 1.00
2024-03-15 7,928,779 9,010,191 -12.00% -1,081,412 11,442,840 1.00
2024-02-29 9,010,191 7,770,305 15.96% 1,239,886 20,232,827 1.00
2024-02-15 7,770,305 9,267,248 -16.15% -1,496,943 41,011,025 1.00
2024-01-31 9,267,248 10,718,119 -13.54% -1,450,871 6,895,366 1.34
2024-01-12 10,718,119 10,122,338 5.89% 595,781 7,023,177 1.53
2023-12-29 10,122,338 15,087,024 -32.91% -4,964,686 6,172,403 1.64
2023-12-15 15,087,024 13,134,955 14.86% 1,952,069 7,545,607 2.00
2023-11-30 13,134,955 12,187,835 7.77% 947,120 5,969,116 2.20
2023-11-15 12,187,835 11,146,828 9.34% 1,041,007 5,236,256 2.33
2023-10-31 11,146,828 9,805,827 13.68% 1,341,001 4,612,735 2.42
2023-10-13 9,805,827 13,833,679 -29.12% -4,027,852 5,705,856 1.72
2023-09-29 13,833,679 400 3458319.75% 13,833,279 13,470,419 1.03
2023-09-15 400 0 100.00% 400 20,413,773 1.00

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is short interest?

Short interest represents the number of shares sold short but not yet covered. It reflects bearish sentiment and short-selling pressure.

What does Short Interest % of Float mean?

This metric indicates what percentage of a company’s tradable float is currently held as short positions. Higher percentages imply stronger short pressure.

What is considered high short interest?

Typically:
5%–10%: Moderate
10%–20%: High
20%+: Extremely high with elevated squeeze risk

What is a short squeeze?

A short squeeze occurs when short sellers rush to cover their positions as the stock price rises, accelerating the upward movement.

What is Days to Cover (DTC)?

Days to Cover equals short interest divided by average daily trading volume. Higher DTC means shorts need more time to exit their positions.

What level of Days to Cover is risky?

<2 days: Low risk
2–5 days: Moderate
5+ days: High squeeze potential
7–10 days: Extreme risk zone

What causes a short squeeze?

Common triggers include strong earnings, breakouts, upgrades, high volume, low float, or extreme short interest combined with rising prices.

What is a Short Squeeze Score?

It is a composite rating reflecting squeeze risk using short interest, DTC, liquidity, and momentum factors.

Can a stock with low short interest still squeeze?

Yes. Low float or sudden momentum can still trigger squeezes, though the probability is lower than highly shorted stocks.

How often is short interest updated?

FINRA updates short interest twice each month (bi-weekly). Market platforms refresh once the data is released.

Does short interest data get delayed during a U.S. government shutdown?

FINRA is not a government agency, so its operations do not stop during a federal shutdown. However, short interest data can still be delayed indirectly because the reporting and regulatory infrastructure involves broker-dealers and certain SEC processes.

During prolonged shutdowns, minor delays have occurred historically, but FINRA generally continues releasing bi-weekly short interest updates with minimal disruption.

Are short squeezes predictable?

You can identify high-risk conditions, but timing is inherently uncertain. A squeeze requires both high short interest and positive momentum.

Does high short interest guarantee a squeeze?

No. High short interest often reflects negative fundamental expectations and may not result in a squeeze if price pressure does not rise.

Is ARM currently a highly shorted stock?

This depends on the latest Short Interest % of Float shown above. Levels above 10% are considered high, while above 20% are extremely elevated.

What is the current short squeeze risk for ARM?

The Short Squeeze Score at the top of this page provides a real-time assessment of squeeze probability for ARM.

Is ARM a potential short squeeze candidate?

If ARM has high short interest, elevated DTC, or strong upward momentum, the risk of a squeeze increases significantly.

What is the Days to Cover for ARM?

The DTC value for ARM displayed above reflects how long it may take short sellers to exit their positions.

What is the short interest trend for ARM?

The bi-weekly short interest history on this page shows whether bearish positioning in ARM is increasing or decreasing.

Has short interest in ARM increased recently?

The “Change in Short Interest” indicator above reports the most recent change from the previous FINRA update.

What short interest level is considered risky for ARM?

Typically, squeeze risk for ARM becomes elevated when short interest exceeds 10%–20% of float.

How does ARM compare to other heavily shorted stocks?

The Short Squeeze Score allows direct comparison between ARM and other high-SI stocks in the market.

What historical short interest data is available for ARM?

This dashboard includes all available bi-weekly FINRA short interest records for ARM.

Does ARM have low float or liquidity risks?

Low float or poor liquidity magnifies squeeze potential. These attributes indirectly influence ARM’s Short Squeeze Score.

How often is ARM’s short interest updated?

ARM’s short interest is refreshed with each new FINRA bi-weekly update.

What events could trigger a squeeze in ARM?

Potential triggers include positive earnings, analyst upgrades, high-volume breakouts, or unexpected catalysts that push ARM sharply upward.