REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSept 21 (Reuters) - Arm Holdings' stock on Thursday dipped for the first time below its initial public offering price, while short sellers appeared to be betting against the chip designer just a week after its Wall Street debut.
Shares of Klaviyo (KVYO.N) which debuted on Wall Street on Wednesday, finished up 2.9% at $33.72 versus the marketing automation firm's $30 IPO price.
Suggesting short sellers are betting against Arm, about 14 million of its shares were on loan, equivalent to 8% of the stock's free float, data and analytics company Ortex said.
Short sellers borrow stocks to short them, and the relationship between shares on loan and shorted is normally close, according to Ortex.
Arm shares appear highly shorted compared to other recent IPOs.
Persons:
Dado Ruvic, Ortex, Peter Hillerberg, Noel Randewich, Lewis Krauskopf, Lance Tupper, Richard Chang
Organizations:
REUTERS, Arm Holdings, Nasdaq, Federal, U.S, Thomson