VGT enters the back half of June nursing its worst weekly loss in months, down 8.6% to $114.99, even as the one-month picture still shows a modest 2.3% gain — a split that captures the tension in mega-cap tech right now.
The most interesting development this week is the divergence between short positioning and options sentiment. Short interest has been quietly building. It rose 14% over the past month to 2.2% of the free float — not an extreme level by any measure, but the direction is consistent and the pace of the past week (up another 6%) suggests incremental conviction from bears. That build has come alongside a modest tightening in borrowing costs, which are up roughly 19% on the week to 0.55% — still very cheap in absolute terms, but the trend is worth noting given the concurrent price weakness. Availability in the lending market remains exceptionally loose, with around 44.6 million shares available to borrow, nearly fifteen times the current short position. There is no squeeze pressure here; the borrow market is among the most relaxed it has been all year.
Options positioning tells a very different story. The put/call ratio has actually eased relative to where it was in late April and early May. It now runs at 0.59, almost exactly in line with its 20-day average of 0.60, and the z-score of -0.27 signals no meaningful skew in either direction. Through April and into early May, the PCR was consistently above 0.62-0.66 — a period of heavier hedging that has since unwound. Despite the sharp weekly decline, options traders are not rushing to buy downside protection. That relative calm in the options market, set against the steady short-interest build and an 8.6% weekly drawdown, is the week's central tension for VGT.
The ORTEX short score has been drifting higher too. It moved from 27.4 at the start of June to 29.0 on June 9 — a modest increase, but the score has crept up on each of the last seven sessions without interruption. The combined score of 28.9 remains well below levels that would signal an aggressive short thesis, reinforcing that what's happening here looks more like cautious repositioning than a conviction-driven bear attack. For an ETF with this level of borrow availability, the short-interest build is best read as a hedge against tech sector volatility rather than a directional bet on further weakness.
What to watch next is whether the weekly price decline draws fresh short interest into the ETF or whether the building hedges start to unwind if mega-cap names stabilise — the combination of a loose borrow market, neutral options, and a still-low short score means the setup is data-dependent rather than structurally charged.
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