Free Trial

This company has been marked as potentially delisted and may not be actively trading.

A SPAC II Acquisition (ASCBR) Short Interest Ratio & Short Volume

A SPAC II Acquisition Short Interest Data

A SPAC II Acquisition (ASCBR) has a short interest of 6,000 shares. This marks a -33.33% decrease in short interest from the previous month. The short interest ratio (days to cover) is 0.2, indicating that it would take 0.2 days of the average trading volume of 34,200 shares to cover all short positions.

Current Short Interest
6,000 shares
Previous Short Interest
9,000 shares
Change Vs. Previous Month
-33.33%
Dollar Volume Sold Short
$600.00
Short Interest Ratio
0.2 Days to Cover
Last Record Date
June 15, 2023
Today's Trading Volume
200 shares
Average Trading Volume
34,200 shares
Today's Volume Vs. Average
1%
Short Selling A SPAC II Acquisition?
cover of A Guide to High-Short-Interest Stocks and How to Trade Them ebook

Sign up to receive the latest short interest report for A SPAC II Acquisition and its competitors with MarketBeat's FREE newsletter.

Skip Charts & View Short Interest History

ASCBR Short Interest Over Time

ASCBR Days to Cover Over Time

ASCBR Percentage of Float Shorted Over Time

A SPAC II Acquisition Short Interest History

Report DateTotal Shares Sold ShortDollar Volume Sold ShortChange from Previous ReportPercentage of Float ShortedDays to CoverPrice on Report Date
6/15/20236,000 shares $600.00 -33.3%N/A0.2 $0.10
5/31/20239,000 shares $1,170.00 -71.7%N/A0.3 $0.13
5/15/202331,800 shares $2,547.18 No ChangeN/A1 $0.08
9/15/2022200 shares $15.00 -97.8%N/A0 $0.08
8/31/20229,100 shares $546.00 +78.4%N/A0.3 $0.06
8/15/20225,100 shares $510.00 -1.9%N/A0.1 $0.10
7/31/20225,200 shares $546.00 -16.1%N/A0.1 $0.11
7/15/20226,200 shares $0.00 No ChangeN/A0 $0.00

ASCBR Short Interest - Frequently Asked Questions

What is A SPAC II Acquisition's current short interest?

Short interest is the volume of A SPAC II Acquisition shares that have been sold short but have not yet been covered or closed out. As of June 15th, traders have sold 6,000 shares of ASCBR short. Learn More on A SPAC II Acquisition's current short interest.

Is A SPAC II Acquisition's short interest increasing or decreasing?

A SPAC II Acquisition saw a decline in short interest during the month of June. As of June 15th, there was short interest totaling 6,000 shares, a decline of 33.3% from the previous total of 9,000 shares. Changes in short volume can be used to identify positive and negative investor sentiment. Investors that short sell a stock are betting that its price will decline in the future. An increase in short sale volume suggests bearish (negative) sentiment among investors. A decrease on short sale volume suggests bullish (positive) sentiment.

How does A SPAC II Acquisition's short interest compare to its competitors?

Here is how the short interest of companies in the industry of "trading" compare to A SPAC II Acquisition: Black Hawk Acquisition Co. (0.01%).

Which stocks are the most shorted right now?

As of the most recent reporting period, the following stocks had the largest short interest positions: T-Mobile US, Inc. ($3.80 billion), Canadian Natural Resources Limited ($3.69 billion), Charter Communications, Inc. ($2.95 billion), Occidental Petroleum Co. ($2.78 billion), Moderna, Inc. ($2.38 billion), Palantir Technologies Inc. ($2.29 billion), T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. ($2.19 billion), Coinbase Global, Inc. ($2.08 billion), Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. ($2.02 billion), and Verisk Analytics, Inc. ($1.96 billion). View all of the most shorted stocks.

What does it mean to sell short A SPAC II Acquisition stock?

Short selling ASCBR is an investing strategy that aims to generate trading profit from A SPAC II Acquisition as its price is falling. To short a stock, an investor borrows shares, sells them and buys the shares back on the public market later to return it to the lender. Short sellers are betting that a stock will decline in price. If the stock does drop after selling, the short seller buys it back at a lower price and returns it to the lender. The difference between the sell price and the buy price is the trader's profit.

How does a short squeeze work against A SPAC II Acquisition?

A short squeeze for A SPAC II Acquisition occurs when it has a large amount of short interest and its stock appreciates in price. This forces short sellers to cover their short interest positions by buying actual shares of ASCBR, which in turn drives the price of the stock up even further.

How often is A SPAC II Acquisition's short interest reported?

Short interest is typically published by a stock exchange once per month. However, NASDAQ publishes a report for U.S. stocks, including ASCBR, twice per month. The most recent reporting period available is June, 15 2023.




This page (NASDAQ:ASCBR) was last updated on 5/11/2025 by MarketBeat.com Staff
From Our Partners