In mid-February 2026, CME Group (CME) has emerged as a focal point for contrarian traders, with short interest rising significantly despite the exchange operator posting record-breaking activity metrics. As of the February 17, 2026 reporting cycle, short interest in the stock reached approximately 5.21 million shares, a 23.6% increase from the prior month.
While the company remains the primary beneficiary of global market volatility, a segment of the market is betting that a peak in interest rate uncertainty and shifting margin requirements may cool its near-term growth.
The Paradox: Record Volumes vs. Bearish Sentiment
The bearish positioning in CME Group comes at a time when its core operational metrics are at all-time highs. This divergence is driven by three main factors:
Record January Activity: CME Group reported its highest January Average Daily Volume (ADV) on record at 29.6 million contracts, up 15% year-over-year. Interest rate products led the charge with 13.9 million contracts (+18%).
Precious Metals Volatility: The metals segment saw a massive 218% increase in ADV. However, recent decisions by the exchange to raise margins (e.g., increasing Silver futures margins from 15% to 18%) have led to a reduction in leveraged participation, prompting concerns about a volume “exhaustion” point.
Valuation Concerns: With the stock trading near all-time highs (approaching $309), some analysts suggest the valuation is “overextended.” A consensus P/E ratio of approximately 27x has led bears to argue that the current record-volume cycle is already fully priced in.
Short Interest and Market Metrics (February 2026)
| Metric | February 17, 2026 Value | Context |
| Short Interest | 5.21 Million Shares | 23.6% increase from mid-January. |
| Short Ratio (Days to Cover) | 2.8 Days | Based on avg daily volume of 1.9M shares. |
| Short % of Float | 1.45% | Historically low but trending upward. |
| Stock Price Position | $303.07 | Within 2% of the 52-week high ($309.35). |
Potential for a Short-Squeeze
The “squeeze” narrative centers on the upcoming February 25 earnings report and the release of FOMC minutes on February 18.
Macro Catalysts: If Federal Reserve minutes suggest a more aggressive rate-cutting path than the current June/July expectations, a surge in interest rate hedging could drive CME volumes even higher, forcing shorts to cover.
Product Innovation: Traders are also watching for news on the mid-2026 launch of Single Stock Futures and expansion into Google Cloud infrastructure, which could provide a multi-year growth narrative that bears may be overlooking.






