IAC Inc. filed its Q1 results after the close on May 4 and dropped 8% the next day. Yet within 24 hours, nearly every analyst covering the stock raised their price target. That divergence — a punishing price reaction against a wave of upward Street revisions — defines the setup heading into the week.
The short interest story adds texture here. Bears hold a meaningful position: SI runs at 14.1% of the free float, a level that has been largely stable since late March after pulling back from a local peak near 15.3% in early April. The week's 5% week-on-week rise in estimated shares short means shorts added modestly into earnings — but the borrow market gives no sign of acute pressure. Cost to borrow is negligible at 0.45%, and availability has loosened considerably. The lending pool is far from tight, sitting well below the 52-week trough in borrow scarcity. That combination — elevated but not extreme short interest with easy, cheap borrow — describes a stock where bears are comfortable holding positions rather than being forced to cover.
Options positioning tells a more interesting story. The put/call ratio has dropped sharply to 6.3 after spending most of April above 9.5 — including a stretch near the 52-week high of 10.4 in early April. The fall below the 20-day average of 8.6 (roughly 1.5 standard deviations below the mean) means the post-earnings options market is less defensively positioned than it was coming in. Hedgers unwound protection after the print. That the stock fell 8% and the PCR still dropped suggests options players see the damage as done, not a prelude to further selling.
The analyst response was striking in its breadth. Most of the Street moved targets higher within hours of the print. JPMorgan's Cory Carpenter raised his Overweight target to $52 from $46. Goldman Sachs had already lifted to $56 from $48 late in April. Barclays went to $55 from $48. TD Cowen carried the most conviction, moving to $66 from $60. The lone dissent came from Jefferies, which downgraded from Buy to Hold with a $44 target — the only firm stepping back from the bullish camp. The mean target now sits at roughly $52, a 25% premium to Tuesday's close of $41.36. The bull case centres on the People segment growing revenue at a mid-teens rate, a meaningful Turo stake, and the potential for further asset monetisation. Bears point to Search segment headwinds (down roughly 30% year-on-year), conglomerate discount dynamics, and the stock's heavy sensitivity to movements in its MGM stake. EPS surprise ranks in the 93rd percentile across the universe — the company has a strong track record of beating estimates — yet the market's reaction to Q1 was a second consecutive post-earnings selloff: the February print drew a 4.4% one-day decline.
Institutional ownership shows a concentrated registry. BlackRock holds just over 10% of shares outstanding, with Vanguard at 9% and chairman Barry Diller at 8.6%. Aristeia Capital and Southeastern Asset Management both materially increased their stakes as of year-end 2025. The concentration means the stock is sensitive to position changes from a small number of large holders — conviction cuts both ways.
The next earnings event is flagged for August 4. Between now and then, the most relevant watch points are whether the post-print short interest pull continues (the three-month trend has been gradual de-risking by shorts despite no fundamental improvement) and how quickly the stock closes the gap to the revised analyst targets — a distance that multiple bellwether firms now peg at more than $10.
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