Investment Banking & Brokerage Companies By Short Ratio

Short Ratio
Short RatioEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1PJT PJT Partners
6.02
 0.18 
 2.53 
 0.45 
2SIEB Siebert Financial Corp
5.72
 0.20 
 4.16 
 0.85 
3FRHC Freedom Holding Corp
5.57
 0.23 
 1.80 
 0.42 
4RJF Raymond James Financial
4.37
 0.28 
 1.91 
 0.54 
5MC Moelis Co
3.98
 0.07 
 2.89 
 0.20 
6LAZ Lazard
3.97
 0.11 
 2.59 
 0.28 
7XP Xp Inc
3.78
(0.14)
 2.24 
(0.30)
8RILY B Riley Financial
3.61
(0.01)
 6.42 
(0.06)
9BGC BGC Group
3.38
 0.04 
 2.27 
 0.10 
10OPY Oppenheimer Holdings
3.21
 0.13 
 2.10 
 0.28 
11PIPR Piper Sandler Companies
2.52
 0.14 
 2.87 
 0.39 
12GS Goldman Sachs Group
2.5
 0.13 
 2.23 
 0.30 
13SF Stifel Financial
2.4
 0.23 
 2.12 
 0.48 
14MS Morgan Stanley
2.35
 0.22 
 2.11 
 0.46 
15SCHW Charles Schwab Corp
2.18
 0.23 
 1.66 
 0.38 
16EVR Evercore Partners
2.14
 0.15 
 2.72 
 0.41 
17HLI Houlihan Lokey
2.07
 0.18 
 1.87 
 0.33 
18VIRT Virtu Financial
1.84
 0.18 
 1.68 
 0.30 
19SNEX Stonex Group
1.8
 0.21 
 1.80 
 0.37 
20NMR Nomura Holdings ADR
1.76
 0.05 
 2.05 
 0.10 
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
Short Ratio is typically used by traders and speculators to identify trends in current market sentiment for a particular equity instrument. In its simple terms this ratio shows how many days it will take all current short sellers to cover their positions if the price of a stock begins to rise. The higher the Short Ratio, the longer it would take to buy back the borrowed shares. In theory, the more short positions are currently outstanding, the faster it will be to cover shorted positions.