Why this matters: RBC Bearings has climbed 16% in a month. Now three distinct data streams are flashing at once — short sellers are building positions, options traders are hedging, and insiders have been selling into the strength.
Short interest jumped 40% in a single week. It now stands at 1.75% of free float — still a low absolute level, but the pace of change is notable.
Shares short rose from roughly 393,000 to 552,000 in five trading days. Over the past month, the position has grown 53%. That is a deliberate, accelerating build.
The lending market remains wide open. Availability sits at the maximum reading in the dataset, with over 31 million shares available to borrow. Shorts are not squeezed for supply. Cost to borrow is 0.32% — cheap. There is no friction preventing further position-building.
The put-call ratio hit 0.79 on June 25. That is 2.4 standard deviations above the 20-day mean of 0.74. The ratio has been climbing steadily since mid-May, when it sat below 0.50.
This is the highest sustained put demand RBC has seen across the observable period. The 52-week PCR high is 1.68, so the absolute level is not extreme. But the rate of change — and its alignment with rising short interest — gives the signal more weight.
The insider picture adds a third layer. Eight insiders sold shares in June. The CEO sold 4,892 shares on June 1 for $2.8 million. The COO sold 1,630 shares the same day for $932,000. The CFO, General Counsel, and multiple directors followed.
Net insider selling over 90 days totals approximately $14.8 million. No purchases are recorded in the same window. Executives sold at prices ranging from $572 to $658 — precisely the range where the stock has been trading during its recent surge.
Analysts remain broadly constructive. Morgan Stanley raised its target to $640 in May. Truist lifted to $615. The consensus mean target sits at $616 — now below the current price of $649. The stock has rallied past analyst targets.
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