If you've spent any time in the stock market, you've probably experienced a special kind of frustration. You buy a stock. You do the research. You read the earnings reports. You study the balance sheet. You convince yourself you've found something undervalued. Then the stock falls. Not because the business deteriorated. Not because earnings collapsed. Not because management got caught running a secret alpaca smuggling operation. It falls because everyone else hates it. And suddenly you're sitting there staring at a sea of red wondering whether you're a genius early to the party or an idiot who wandered into the wrong building. I've been there. Most investors have. But sometimes something strange happens. The crowd becomes too negative. The pessimism becomes too crowded. The bets against the company become too large. And what follows can look like financial sorcery. The stock explodes upward. Prices move so violently that they seem detached fr...
If there's one thing I've learned from years of watching financial markets, it's that crowds are often right right up until the moment they're spectacularly wrong. That isn't an insult. It's simply how markets work. Crowds create trends. Crowds create momentum. Crowds create narratives. And occasionally, crowds create opportunities. One of my favorite ways to measure crowd conviction is something called short interest. Most investors hear the phrase and immediately think of Wall Street villains sitting in dark rooms hoping companies fail. Reality is much less dramatic. Short interest is simply a measurement of how many investors are betting against a stock. That's it. No secret conspiracy. No market manipulation hidden behind every ticker symbol. Just a large collection of people expressing the opinion that a stock's price is likely headed lower. But here's where things get interesting. I've discovered that short interest often te...