- What are fails-to-deliver (FTD) for DRIO?
- A fail-to-deliver happens when a trade in DRIO isn't settled by the delivery date — the seller doesn't hand over the shares on time. The SEC publishes the aggregate number of DRIO shares that failed to deliver on each settlement date. The latest published figure is 132.00 shares (settled 2026-06-11).
- Does a high FTD mean DRIO is heavily shorted?
- Not directly. Fails-to-deliver is a settlement metric, not short interest — fails arise from mechanical settlement issues, market-making, and long as well as short sellers. A persistent, large fail relative to a name's own history can be worth noting, but FTD alone is not a measure of how shorted a stock is.
- How often is DRIO FTD data updated?
- The SEC releases fails-to-deliver data twice a month — one file for the first half of each month and one for the second — with a lag. Settlement itself is T+1 (the business day after the trade). Under Regulation SHO, participants must generally close out short-sale fails by the next settlement day (longer windows exist for long sales, bona-fide market making, and certain deemed-to-own securities), and names with large persistent fails can join the exchange threshold-security list after 5 consecutive settlement days. This page rebuilds as new files publish.
- Is DRIO's fails-to-deliver a buy or sell signal?
- On its own, no — fails-to-deliver is a settlement metric, not a trading signal. Weigh it alongside the company's fundamentals and filings on its full DRIO page.