NIO heads into its June 4 earnings print with a 14% weekly rally on the board and a short position that has barely flinched.
The price recovery is real but context matters. NIO closed at $6.01, up 14.3% on the week — a sharp reversal from the $5.26 print that followed last month's earnings slide. That May 21 print cost shareholders nearly 7% in a single session, and the five-day follow-through was essentially flat. The June 4 report is now the clearest near-term focal point, and the way the market is leaning into it tells a more complicated story than the price action alone suggests.
The positioning picture has shifted on one key dimension: availability has loosened dramatically. After tightening to a cycle low of 27.5% on May 25 — flagged in last week's note as the most constrained the lending pool had been since early May — availability has since rebounded sharply to 55.9%. That is the widest reading in several weeks and represents a meaningful reopening of the borrow market. Short interest itself has barely moved in response. Shares short edged fractionally lower on Tuesday to 141.5 million, but remain up 2.5% on the week and 1.9% on the month — consolidating near the elevated levels that have persisted since the post-May-earnings rebuild. Cost to borrow is negligible at 0.59% annualised, down 8% on the week and the lowest level in a month, suggesting no squeeze friction whatsoever. The overall lending picture: availability has reopened, borrow is cheap, and short sellers are not covering into the rally.
Options are close to neutral. The put/call ratio of 0.72 sits almost exactly on its 20-day average, with a z-score of -0.03 — as flat as it gets. There is no elevated hedging activity heading into the print, which is notable given that the last earnings event produced a near-7% down day. NIO's closest US-listed peer, XPEV, is up 8.1% on the week, while LI has slipped 2.8% over the same period — the sector is moving in different directions, and NIO's rally does not appear to be a broad Chinese EV re-rating.
The Street backdrop is mixed and largely dated. The most recent analyst action on record is an HSBC upgrade to Buy with a $6.80 target from March 13 — the only action within the past three months. Targets from firms active in late 2025 cluster in the $5–$8.50 range, with Barclays the lone bear at $4.00 and Underweight. The mean price target of $47 is clearly a data artefact — likely reflecting stale pre-ADR-conversion or Hong Kong-listed share equivalents — and should be disregarded. The more instructive read from Benzinga's bull-bear framing: the bull case rests on battery-swapping differentiation and a growing model range, while the bear case centres on 2% market share, underwhelming new model launches, and intensifying domestic competition. Neither side has fresh ammunition ahead of tomorrow's numbers.
One insider note worth flagging: on June 1, NIO's Founder and President sold 150,000 shares at $5.60, alongside smaller sells from the CFO and an Executive Vice President. Each of those insiders also received share awards the same day, making the net position close to flat — the significance score of 1 (on a 10-point scale) confirms ORTEX rates this as routine compensation-linked activity rather than a directional signal. The 90-day net insider position is a modest +350,000 shares, barely material at this share count.
The short score of 61.2 ranks NIO in roughly the 9th percentile of stocks by short-score — meaning very few names carry a higher short score. That has been stable over the past two weeks, drifting between 60.2 and 61.9. The factor backdrop reinforces the ambiguity: EPS surprise ranks in the 93rd percentile, meaning NIO has consistently beaten estimates, but 30- and 90-day EPS momentum both sit at the 1st percentile — analysts have been cutting near-term forecasts sharply. The question tomorrow's print answers is whether the actual delivery numbers and margin trajectory are enough to arrest that estimate-revision cycle.
What to watch: how availability behaves in the sessions after the June 4 print — if the borrow market tightens back toward May's lows despite the rally, it would signal shorts are re-entering rather than retreating.
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