What Is a Short Squeeze?

This stock market phenomenon is caused by large-scale betting against stocks perceived to be overvalued.
Alieza Durana
By Alieza Durana 
Updated
Edited by Mary M. Flory

Many or all of the products featured here are from our partners who compensate us. This influences which products we write about and where and how the product appears on a page. However, this does not influence our evaluations. Our opinions are our own. Here is a list of our partners and here's how we make money.


The investing information provided on this page is for educational purposes only. NerdWallet, Inc. does not offer advisory or brokerage services, nor does it recommend or advise investors to buy or sell particular stocks, securities or other investments.

MORE LIKE THISInvestingStocks

A short squeeze is a market phenomenon in which a shorted security, such as a stock, jumps unexpectedly in price.

Investors who short a stock are betting the stock will go down in value. To capitalize on that, they borrow shares from a broker, then sell them at the current price. When the stock price falls, they buy the shares at the lower price, return them to the broker and pocket the difference.

If the stock price rises instead, a short-seller may lose money — they still have to return the shares to the broker, which may require buying them back at the new higher price.

A short squeeze is an amplified version of that scenario: In a short squeeze, a stock that is heavily shorted by investors suddenly and unexpectedly increases in value. That increase causes short-sellers to attempt to exit their investment, which requires buying the stock. The rush of buy orders from short-sellers boosts demand for the stock, which can push the stock's price up even higher.

Short-sellers enter the market with a belief that a company and its stock price are overvalued. This approach differs from “going long,” which is when an investor buys stock with the expectation that prices will rise over the long run.

How does a short squeeze happen?

Short-sellers generally are looking for overvalued investments. Companies valued between $100 million and $8 billion (known as small-cap stocks) are good candidates to be shorted, as are stocks with high short interest, or a high percentage of stock shares held by short-sellers. Stock prices on the decline also can attract short-sellers.

The short: First, short-sellers need to have a margin account to execute the trade through their brokerage company. Short-sellers borrow a stock’s shares through a brokerage. The goal is to buy back the stock at a lower price to make a profit.

The short squeeze: Because short-sellers have to buy back and return the borrowed shares, their mass entry into the market can create price competition, causing prices to jump unexpectedly.

This unexpected rise in the share price can signal to other short-sellers to exit the short, further driving the price up. Positive product news or earnings reports can quickly derail a short. Frantic buying can drive stock prices to rise out of control, squeezing the short-sellers out of their positions.

» Learn more about margin trading

Advertisement
NerdWallet rating 

5.0

/5
NerdWallet rating 

5.0

/5
NerdWallet rating 

4.7

/5

Fees 

$0

per trade

Fees 

$0

per trade

Fees 

$0

per trade

Account minimum 

$0

Account minimum 

$0

Account minimum 

$0

Promotion 

None

no promotion available at this time

Promotion 

Get up to 12 free fractional shares (valued up to $3,000)

when you open and fund an account with Webull.

Promotion 

Get $50

when you open & fund a new account with $5K on Chase.com or the Chase Mobile® app.

Terms connected to a short squeeze

  • Short-seller: Investor who tries to profit by betting on falling stock prices.

  • Short ratio or "days to cover": The number of days it would take for a company to recover the shorted stocks during normal trading.

  • Short interest: Percentage of stock shares held by short-sellers.

  • Margin trade: Borrowing money from your brokerage company to purchase stock.

» Need a refresher course? Learn the basics of shorting a stock

How to identify a short squeeze before it happens

A short squeeze is part of the risk when you’re a short-seller. To keep track of the likelihood of a short squeeze (and to try to avoid getting caught up in one), explore these three tools:

  • The Relative Strength Index “measures both the speed and rate of change in price movements within the market,” allowing investors to identify oversold market conditions ripe for a short squeeze.

  • Nasdaq publishes a semimonthly Short Interest Report, which includes “a summary of the consolidated market short interest positions in all Nasdaq-listed securities.”

  • Stock screeners such as most shorted stocks from companies like Yahoo Finance can help you identify heavily shorted stocks, too.

» Don’t have a brokerage yet? See our picks for the best online brokerages

GameStop, AMC and other famous short squeezes

You may recognize a few short squeezes from recent history. In the 2000s, a group of investors believed the housing bubble would burst and shorted the market, as depicted in the book “The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine” by Michael Lewis and its film adaptation.

When Porsche announced a takeover of Volkswagen in October 2008, short-sellers scrambled and prices soared. Volkswagen briefly became the most valuable company in the world before prices declined.

Meme stocks, or stocks with viral internet cultural support, have been targets of ongoing short squeezes, starting with GameStop Corp. in 2021. Movie theater company AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. and brick-and-mortar retailers like Express and Bed Bath & Beyond have been recent short-squeeze targets since 2021.

» Learn more about the battle between Reddit and hedge funds behind recent short squeezes

Got investment goals?
Track your net worth and use our Nerdy tools to learn about how to save more for retirement.
Get more smart money moves – straight to your inbox
Sign up and we’ll send you Nerdy articles about the money topics that matter most to you along with other ways to help you get more from your money.