Swedish conglomerate INVE A reports Q1 results Monday with negligible short interest and CEO-led insider buying. The stock trades at SEK 369.40, up 9% over the past month despite a 3.6% pullback this week.
Short interest data is unavailable for Investor AB. Cost to borrow stands at 0.78% as of April 21, down 4.5% week-over-week. Utilisation sits at just 0.02%, near the bottom of its 52-week range (max 1.31%). The minimal borrowing activity signals virtually no bearish pressure heading into the print.
Options data is unavailable for this Swedish-listed equity.
One analyst maintains a buy rating with a price target of SEK 380, implying modest upside from current levels. No recent rating changes or target adjustments have been published in the past 90 days.
Investor AB ranks in the 98th percentile on dividend score and the 93rd percentile on analyst recommendation differential. The stock also scores in the 96th percentile on ORTEX's short score ranking, though the absolute short score of 25.1 reflects minimal short interest rather than squeeze potential.
CEO Ulf Christian Cederholm led recent buying with four purchases totaling SEK 1.1 million equivalent since January. Insiders bought $429,000 net over the past 90 days, with CFO Jacob Lund and HR Director Jessica Haeggstroem also adding shares.
The Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation controls 20.1% of shares. Vanguard and BlackRock both increased stakes materially in Q1, adding 8.4 million and 7.7 million shares respectively. FMR (Fidelity) more than doubled its position, adding 26.3 million shares.
The company last reported on April 21, just four days ago. Prior reports occurred on March 27, January 22 (scheduled), and January 22 (actual).
No active ORTEX Alpha signals are currently flagged for INVE A.
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