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The Most Heavily Shorted Stocks: A Guide to Potential Squeeze Targets

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
When more than half of a stock's float is sold short, things can get interesting. Here are the 10 most heavily shorted stocks trading today, from Lucid to MARA to Kohl's, and what traders need to know about short squeeze opportunities.

When traders scan for heavily shorted stocks, they're usually playing one of two angles. Some want to join the bears and profit from a company's decline. Others are hunting for the opposite: a short squeeze setup where rapid price increases force short sellers to cover, creating a feedback loop of buying pressure and exploding prices.

Either way, these stocks represent real money on the table and strong opinions about where prices are headed. Let's break down which stocks are attracting the most short interest right now.

Why Stocks Become Heavily Shorted

A stock doesn't accumulate massive short interest by accident. When you see 40% or 50% of a company's publicly traded shares sold short, that represents a strong collective belief among experienced traders and institutional investors that something is fundamentally wrong with the valuation.

The mechanics are straightforward: short sellers borrow shares, immediately sell them at today's price, and plan to buy them back later when the price has fallen. The difference between the selling price and the lower buyback price becomes their profit. It's essentially betting against the company.

Heavy short interest usually reflects well-researched conviction among professional traders that a company faces serious headwinds, whether that's deteriorating fundamentals, competitive pressure, or just an inflated valuation that needs to come back to earth.

But here's where it gets interesting. Bullish traders, often from the retail crowd, see that same high short interest as opportunity. When short sellers need to cover their positions, they have to buy shares. If the stock price starts rising instead of falling, those forced purchases can accelerate the move upward in what's known as a short squeeze. The potential gains can be massive and lightning-fast, though the risks are equally substantial.

The Current Short Interest Leaders

As of December 10, 2025, these are the most heavily shorted stocks with market capitalizations above $2 billion and free floats exceeding 5 million shares. The ranking is based on short interest, which measures the total number of shares sold short but not yet covered, expressed as a percentage of the shares available for public trading.

Company Name & Ticker              Short Interest (%) [Dec. 10, 2025]
Lucid Group, Inc. (LCID)52.70%
Avis Budget Group, Inc. (CAR)51.53%
Choice Hotels International, Inc. (CHH)49.05%
Revolve Group, Inc. (RVLV)47.04%
TransMedics Group, Inc. (TMDX)38.73%
Hims & Hers Health, Inc. (HIMS)36.58%
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. (MPW)36.46%
MARA Holdings, Inc. (MARA)35.99%
Kohl's Corp. (KSS)35.86%
Northern Oil and Gas, Inc. (NOG)34.59%

Lucid Group takes the top spot with an eye-popping 52.70% short interest, meaning more than half of its tradable shares are currently sold short. Avis Budget comes in a close second at 51.53%, while Choice Hotels rounds out the top three at just under 49%.

The list includes a diverse mix of sectors. You've got Revolve Group from e-commerce fashion, TransMedics from medical technology, Hims & Hers from telehealth, Medical Properties Trust from real estate, MARA Holdings from Bitcoin mining, Kohl's from traditional retail, and Northern Oil and Gas from energy.

What they all share is significant skepticism from professional short sellers about their current valuations or business prospects.

What Traders Should Remember

These heavily shorted stocks are essentially financial battlegrounds where bearish fundamentals collide with speculative trading strategies. The high short interest tells you that smart money has done research and concluded these companies are overvalued. That's worth paying attention to.

At the same time, short squeezes can deliver extraordinary returns in compressed timeframes. When they happen, the gains can be spectacular. But timing is everything, and getting it right is notoriously difficult. The volatility cuts both ways.

Monitoring short interest rankings can help identify potential squeeze candidates, but it's not a crystal ball. Many heavily shorted stocks stay heavily shorted for good reason. The underlying business challenges that attracted short sellers in the first place don't disappear just because retail traders spot a potential squeeze setup.

The volatility in these stocks usually reflects genuine uncertainty about the business and its future. High short interest is a signal, not a strategy. Anyone considering trades in these names should do thorough due diligence and understand they're stepping into situations where professional investors have already placed significant bets on decline.

These stocks aren't for the faint of heart, but they're worth watching if you understand what the short interest numbers are really telling you about market sentiment and potential price dynamics.

The Most Heavily Shorted Stocks: A Guide to Potential Squeeze Targets

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
When more than half of a stock's float is sold short, things can get interesting. Here are the 10 most heavily shorted stocks trading today, from Lucid to MARA to Kohl's, and what traders need to know about short squeeze opportunities.

When traders scan for heavily shorted stocks, they're usually playing one of two angles. Some want to join the bears and profit from a company's decline. Others are hunting for the opposite: a short squeeze setup where rapid price increases force short sellers to cover, creating a feedback loop of buying pressure and exploding prices.

Either way, these stocks represent real money on the table and strong opinions about where prices are headed. Let's break down which stocks are attracting the most short interest right now.

Why Stocks Become Heavily Shorted

A stock doesn't accumulate massive short interest by accident. When you see 40% or 50% of a company's publicly traded shares sold short, that represents a strong collective belief among experienced traders and institutional investors that something is fundamentally wrong with the valuation.

The mechanics are straightforward: short sellers borrow shares, immediately sell them at today's price, and plan to buy them back later when the price has fallen. The difference between the selling price and the lower buyback price becomes their profit. It's essentially betting against the company.

Heavy short interest usually reflects well-researched conviction among professional traders that a company faces serious headwinds, whether that's deteriorating fundamentals, competitive pressure, or just an inflated valuation that needs to come back to earth.

But here's where it gets interesting. Bullish traders, often from the retail crowd, see that same high short interest as opportunity. When short sellers need to cover their positions, they have to buy shares. If the stock price starts rising instead of falling, those forced purchases can accelerate the move upward in what's known as a short squeeze. The potential gains can be massive and lightning-fast, though the risks are equally substantial.

The Current Short Interest Leaders

As of December 10, 2025, these are the most heavily shorted stocks with market capitalizations above $2 billion and free floats exceeding 5 million shares. The ranking is based on short interest, which measures the total number of shares sold short but not yet covered, expressed as a percentage of the shares available for public trading.

Company Name & Ticker              Short Interest (%) [Dec. 10, 2025]
Lucid Group, Inc. (LCID)52.70%
Avis Budget Group, Inc. (CAR)51.53%
Choice Hotels International, Inc. (CHH)49.05%
Revolve Group, Inc. (RVLV)47.04%
TransMedics Group, Inc. (TMDX)38.73%
Hims & Hers Health, Inc. (HIMS)36.58%
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. (MPW)36.46%
MARA Holdings, Inc. (MARA)35.99%
Kohl's Corp. (KSS)35.86%
Northern Oil and Gas, Inc. (NOG)34.59%

Lucid Group takes the top spot with an eye-popping 52.70% short interest, meaning more than half of its tradable shares are currently sold short. Avis Budget comes in a close second at 51.53%, while Choice Hotels rounds out the top three at just under 49%.

The list includes a diverse mix of sectors. You've got Revolve Group from e-commerce fashion, TransMedics from medical technology, Hims & Hers from telehealth, Medical Properties Trust from real estate, MARA Holdings from Bitcoin mining, Kohl's from traditional retail, and Northern Oil and Gas from energy.

What they all share is significant skepticism from professional short sellers about their current valuations or business prospects.

What Traders Should Remember

These heavily shorted stocks are essentially financial battlegrounds where bearish fundamentals collide with speculative trading strategies. The high short interest tells you that smart money has done research and concluded these companies are overvalued. That's worth paying attention to.

At the same time, short squeezes can deliver extraordinary returns in compressed timeframes. When they happen, the gains can be spectacular. But timing is everything, and getting it right is notoriously difficult. The volatility cuts both ways.

Monitoring short interest rankings can help identify potential squeeze candidates, but it's not a crystal ball. Many heavily shorted stocks stay heavily shorted for good reason. The underlying business challenges that attracted short sellers in the first place don't disappear just because retail traders spot a potential squeeze setup.

The volatility in these stocks usually reflects genuine uncertainty about the business and its future. High short interest is a signal, not a strategy. Anyone considering trades in these names should do thorough due diligence and understand they're stepping into situations where professional investors have already placed significant bets on decline.

These stocks aren't for the faint of heart, but they're worth watching if you understand what the short interest numbers are really telling you about market sentiment and potential price dynamics.

    The Most Heavily Shorted Stocks: A Guide to Potential Squeeze Targets - MarketDash News