Edible Garden AG Incorporated heads into its May 15 earnings release carrying a cost-to-borrow above 100%, a short score that has climbed all week, and a stock down 65% over the past month.
The borrow market tells the most vivid story here. Annualised cost to borrow is running at 107%, down from a peak above 210% in late April but still deep in expensive territory. The easing is real — CTB has fallen roughly 27% week-on-week — yet the absolute level remains punishing for anyone trying to build a new short position. Availability, at 403% of estimated short interest, is generous relative to the amount currently borrowed, suggesting there is no structural squeeze in the lending pool; the high borrow rate reflects the nature of this micro-cap name rather than a scramble for scarce inventory. Short interest itself has surged over the past two weeks — from under 1,000 shares on May 4 to around 108,000 by May 12, a move consistent with renewed speculative activity ahead of the earnings date.
The ORTEX short score frames the broader positioning picture. It has risen from 41.8 on May 4 to 65.9 on May 12, tracking almost in lockstep with the rebuilding of short positions. The days-to-cover rank is in the 92nd percentile — meaning this name scores near the top of the universe on that metric — while the short score rank is in only the 8th percentile, reflecting that even at 65.9, the absolute score remains moderate rather than extreme. Estimated short interest on a free-float basis is now closer to 13%, according to ORTEX real-time data, a level that makes this a genuinely watched name in the borrow market for a company of this size.
The price action sharpens the stakes. At $0.3518, EDBL is down 14% on the week and 65% over the past month — a collapse that has compressed the market cap to a few hundred thousand dollars. That context matters for interpreting the short-side move: the absolute dollar value of short positions is tiny, but the percentage-of-float figures are meaningful. Close peers BYND and ORIS — the two most correlated Nasdaq names in the peer set — posted similar weekly losses of 13% and 15% respectively, suggesting sector-wide weakness rather than a stock-specific catalyst driving this week's decline.
The earnings history adds one clear data point. The most recent prior release, in November 2025, produced a one-day loss of roughly 10% and a five-day loss of 14%. The March 2026 print showed an 12% gain on the day. Neither pattern is consistent enough to define a playbook, but the range of outcomes — double-digit moves in both directions — reflects how volatile a micro-cap with this liquidity profile tends to be around results. The May 15 event is the next test.
Analyst and valuation data for a name at this market cap are too thin to draw conclusions. What to watch Thursday is whether the cost-to-borrow continues its slow retreat post-earnings, or whether a fresh move in the stock reignites demand for borrows and pushes CTB back toward its April highs.
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