Avis Budget Group Inc (NASDAQ:CAR) shares climbed as much as 19% in premarket trading on Tuesday, continuing a multi-day advance and marking the fourth consecutive session of gains.
Market participants flagged the move as driven in large part by short-squeeze dynamics. Data from S3 Partners shows short interest equivalent to 62% of the company’s free float, while Nasdaq’s figures put short interest at 54% and report a days-to-cover metric of 7.3. Those data points have coincided with an extraordinary price run: through Monday’s close, the stock had rallied more than 500% over the prior 30 days, and stood up 374% for the calendar year as of the last close.
Institutional ownership patterns have contributed to the stock’s trading behavior. Barclays moved its rating on the shares to underweight from equal-weight following the near-vertical rally. Analyst Dan Levy explained the firm’s decision by pointing to what he characterized as "a sharp supply/demand mismatch in its stock, with two holders accounting for ~71% of outright ownership of the company, and over 100% of economic interest given outstanding swaps on CAR stock."
Levy said there is uncertainty about how long the rally will last and whether the stock can go higher, but added that "for all the technical dynamics, car rental dynamics are favorable, with improved trends on both price and depreciation."
The convergence of elevated short interest, concentrated ownership and derivative positions tied to the shares has created pronounced trading volatility in CAR stock. Those structural features can magnify price moves in either direction as market participants adjust positions or respond to swings in demand for the shares.
Observers noted two core themes in the recent action: the technical drivers centered on supply and demand imbalances in the stock itself, and underlying industry signals cited by Barclays that point to improving rental-car pricing and depreciation trends. How long the technical-driven rally persists remains uncertain, according to the analyst commentary.
For investors and market observers, the episode illustrates how ownership concentration and high short interest can interact to produce outsized short-term returns and heightened risk in the equity of a single company.