XLF Short Volume
State Street Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Asset Management industry, with a market capitalization near $50.69B, listed on AMEX, carrying a beta of 0.79 to the broader market. The State Street Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF aims to mirror the price and yield performance of the Financial Select Sector Index, before accounting for expenses. public since 1998-12-22.
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
- 2026-06-30
- Short Volume
- 3.9M
- Total Volume
- 8.2M
- Short %
- 47.29%
- 30-Day Avg Short %
- 58.34%
Showing 30 days of FINRA short volume data for State Street Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF.
Learn how short volume is reported and how to read the data →
XLF most-active contracts
| Type | Strike | Expiration | Volume | OI | IV | Bid | Ask |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CALL | $55.00 | Oct 16, 2026 | 20.1K | 11.5K | 15.4% | $1.41 | $1.45 |
| PUT | $46.00 | Oct 16, 2026 | 20.0K | 976 | 23.0% | $0.29 | $0.30 |
Top 2 contracts from the institutional-grade nightly options scan; ranked by volume within the broader S&P 500/400/600 + ETF universe.
Frequently asked XLF short volume questions
- What is the daily XLF short volume?
- As of Jun 30, 2026, State Street Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) short volume is 3.9M shares against 8.2M total reported volume, or 47.29% short-side. Short volume measures shares sold short during the day; it is flow, not inventory.
- How is XLF 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 XLF 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.