Daily Short Sale Volume data is different from the bi-monthly Short Interest data also reported by FINRA. Whereas Short Interest represents open positions, Short Sale Volume represents transactions, some of which are executed to offset other trades that will not necessarily result in an open short position reported in Short Interest data. This explains why Short Sale Volume values are always greater than Short Interest ones.
Daily Short Sale Volume provides aggregated volume by security for all short trades executed and reported to FINRA during normal market hours, i.e., media-reported trades. It's important to note that Short Sale Volume is not consolidated with exchange data and excludes trading activity that is not publicly disseminated.
█ HOW TO USE IT
Load the indicator on an active chart (see here if you don't know how).
If the chart's symbol is traded on one of the exchanges for which FINRA provides Daily Short Sale Volume, it will be displayed in columns. The columns are a brighter red when their value is above average.
You can display Short Sale Volume for another symbol by checking the "Other symbol" checkbox of the script settings' "Inputs" tab and selecting the symbol.
The moving average's length is in days, as Short Volume is daily data. You can hide the average in the script's settings "Style" tab.
Short Interest data reported by FINRA is not yet available on our platform.
On TradingView, Short Sale Volume data is accessible through tickers using special names. For example, NASDAQ:AAPL's Short Sale Volume data can be loaded on your chart via the FINRA:AAPL_SHORT_VOLUME ticker. The indicator displays the name of the ticker used to fetch data in the bottom left. It can be hidden by unchecking the "Tables" item in the "Style" tab of the script's settings.
진정한 TradingView 정신에 따라, 이 스크립트의 저자는 트레이더들이 이해하고 검증할 수 있도록 오픈 소스로 공개했습니다. 저자에게 박수를 보냅니다! 이 코드는 무료로 사용할 수 있지만, 출판물에서 이 코드를 재사용하는 것은 하우스 룰에 의해 관리됩니다. 님은 즐겨찾기로 이 스크립트를 차트에서 쓸 수 있습니다.