SOXL shorts are back. One day after availability appeared to stabilise, short interest jumped 49% in a single session. The borrow market is tightening again — and cost to borrow has tripled since the start of June.
Short interest hit 14.3 million shares on June 24. That is 4.2% of free float — the highest reading since early June. The one-week change is +57.5%.
This reverses the partial cover seen on June 22–23. The previous ORTEX note recorded short interest falling to 2.8% of float as availability snapped back. That reprieve lasted roughly 24 hours.
The move suggests new short positions were opened — not simply old ones held through a volatile session.
Cost to borrow stood at 1.46% on June 3. It is now 4.95%. That is a 242% rise in one month.
The weekly change is +26%. Shorts entering now pay meaningfully more than those who established positions in May.
Despite that, demand has clearly returned. When borrow costs rise alongside short interest, it signals genuine conviction — not passive roll.
Availability sits at 41.5% as of June 24. That is tight — roughly two shares available for every three already borrowed.
It is, however, a significant improvement from the 0.17% reading on June 19, when the lending pool was essentially exhausted. The 52-week low is 0.10%. The pool has refilled somewhat but remains stressed by historical standards.
The pattern through June has been consistent: availability collapses as the ETF rallies, then partially recovers as shorts cover. With SOXL up 20.5% over the past month, the latest build tracks that same dynamic.
The put-call ratio is 1.45 — near its 52-week high of 1.47. The 20-day mean is 1.37. Options positioning skews bearish, consistent with the renewed short interest build.
The PCR z-score is 1.17 — elevated but not extreme.
Three signals now point in the same direction: rising short interest, tightening availability, and climbing borrow costs. The ORTEX short score is 61, down slightly from a recent peak of 64.9 on June 10 — still firmly in elevated territory.
Availability below 41% with a CTB above 4.9% means the cost of maintaining bearish exposure is real. Watch whether shorts hold through the end of the week or availability tightens again toward the lows seen mid-June.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
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