SPUS Short Volume
SP Funds S&P 500 Sharia Industry Exclusions ETF (SPUS) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Asset Management industry, with a market capitalization near $2.54B, listed on AMEX, carrying a beta of 1.10 to the broader market. SPUS is an ETF offering value-conscious, Sharia-compliant exposure to 200 low-leverage stocks from the S&P 500 Index. public since 2019-12-18.
Short volume measures the number of shares sold short on a given day as reported by FINRA. Tracking short volume relative to total volume helps identify unusual bearish sentiment or short-squeeze potential.
- Latest Date
- 2026-06-01
- Short Volume
- 281.2K
- Total Volume
- 381.6K
- Short %
- 73.70%
- 30-Day Avg Short %
- 65.78%
Showing 30 days of FINRA short volume data for SP Funds S&P 500 Sharia Industry Exclusions ETF.
Learn how short volume is reported and how to read the data →
Frequently asked SPUS short volume questions
- What is the daily SPUS short volume?
- As of Jun 1, 2026, SP Funds S&P 500 Sharia Industry Exclusions ETF (SPUS) short volume is 281.2K shares against 381.6K total reported volume, or 73.70% short-side. Short volume measures shares sold short during the day; it is flow, not inventory.
- How is SPUS short volume reported?
- FINRA publishes the Daily Short Sale Volume File for trades reported to FINRA TRFs and the FINRA/Nasdaq ADF on a T+1 basis. The headline figure is the count of shares that printed at the short-sale or short-exempt tick across all reporting venues for the symbol; each exchange separately publishes its own daily short-sale data file.
- What does SPUS short volume tell options traders?
- Daily short-sale flow is one input that helps disambiguate dealer-hedging activity from directional bear flow when the chain shows fresh customer call inventory. It is not a clean MM-only proxy: the headline number mixes directional shorting, options-MM delta-hedging, ETF-creation arbitrage, and convertible-arb hedging. Cross-check against gamma-exposure and OI changes for a cleaner read.