- What are fails-to-deliver (FTD) for Z?
- A fail-to-deliver happens when a trade in Z isn't settled by the delivery date — the seller doesn't hand over the shares on time. The SEC publishes the aggregate number of Z shares that failed to deliver on each settlement date. The latest published figure is 8.82K shares (settled 2026-06-09).
- Does a high FTD mean Z 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 Z 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 Z's fails-to-deliver a buy or sell signal?
- On its own, no — FTD is context, not a verdict. Our current SEC-grounded rating on Z is BUY, based on the company's filings rather than settlement mechanics. Use the fails history as one input alongside the fundamentals.