Short Interest & Thesis
Short Interest & Thesis
Reported short interest is not material to the investment case. As of the April 30, 2026 FINRA bi-monthly settlement, 1.70 million KSPI ADS were sold short — 0.89% of shares outstanding and 2.4 days to cover — and the position fell −14.7% from the prior settlement. But the six-month trend is more interesting than the latest print: short interest roughly doubled from 854K shares (Nov 14, 2025) to a peak 1.99M shares (Apr 15, 2026) before the late-April cover — a real, if small, build during the run-up to the Q1 2026 earnings call and the April 28 IG bond placement. The thesis-risk story is the opposite of the positioning story: the September 2024 Culper Research short report opened a credible 30-page allegation set on Russia exposure, undisclosed related parties (Magnum, Kolesa, ALSECO, Portmone), and executive ties — and although the consolidated US securities class action was dismissed in C.D. California on May 16, 2025, the underlying allegations themselves were never independently adjudicated and remain live disclosure risk into the next 20-F. The reader's main question is not "is KSPI crowded?" — it isn't — but "would another Culper-style report move the stock again?" Probably yes; the structural setup is fragile because the float is thin, the borrow is presumably easy, and a single source-quality short report has already cleared a 19% one-day drop in this name.
Shares Short (Apr 30, 2026)
% of Shares Outstanding
Days to Cover (reported)
Change vs Prior Settlement
$ Volume Sold Short
Days to Cover (vs 20d ADV)
Public Short Reports
Class Actions Dismissed
Reported positioning (FINRA bi-monthly)
KSPI is a NASDAQ-listed ADS, so the only official aggregate short-interest source is the FINRA bi-monthly Short Position Report filed by member firms under Rule 4560. The pipeline's deterministic fetcher did not have an official Kazakhstan/NASDAQ-foreign-issuer adapter configured, so reported short interest was retrieved from the MarketBeat short-interest mirror of the FINRA NASDAQ feed — twelve bi-monthly settlements from November 14, 2025 through April 30, 2026.
Three things in the six-month series. First, the position more than doubled from 854K shares (Nov 14, 2025, 0.45%) to a peak of 1.99M (Apr 15, 2026, 1.05%) — a real build, even if small in percent-of-float terms. The acceleration tracks the Q4 2025 results window (early March 2026) and the run-up to the Q1 2026 print on May 11, 2026. Second, the build was capped at 1.0% — at no point did SI cross into "crowded" territory. Third, the −14.7% fortnightly fall to 1.70M (Apr 30, 2026) coincides with the April 28 $600M IG bond pricing (3.5× oversubscribed) and is the cleanest tape-level evidence yet that the post-class-action institutional re-rating is taking hold. Shorts have been covering into strength, not pressing.
Note: MarketBeat's "% of float" is computed against shares outstanding, not the true free float; KSPI insiders own ~46.2% (CEO Lomtadze 22.62%, Chairman Kim 20.78%, directors/officers as group), so adjusted against the free float of roughly 103M ADS, the latest short stands at ~1.6% of true float and the April peak was ~1.9% — still benign.
Source classification. The data above is reported short interest — outstanding short positions filed by NASDAQ member firms under FINRA Rule 4560 as of the settlement date. It is not short-sale volume, not a public net-short disclosure (those don't apply to KSPI), and not a borrow-pressure indicator. Per FINRA Rule 4560, member firms file twice a month; publication lag is ~8 business days, so the April 30 print became public around May 11–12, 2026.
Crowding vs. liquidity
Days-to-cover screens the more interesting frame: with 20-day ADV of 524,888 shares (per internal liquidity calc) and 1.70M short, the calculated DTC is ~3.2 days; MarketBeat reports 2.4 days using a wider-window ADV. Either way, the cover-out is easily absorbable in a normal market, but KSPI's tape is structurally thin (liquidity verdict: "Illiquid / specialist only" per the technicals tab), and the converse is the more interesting risk — a thin float means a single fresh allegation-driven push lower could move price disproportionately, not that existing shorts would have trouble exiting.
Verdict on crowding: KSPI is not a crowded short. There is no positioning evidence consistent with squeeze risk. The asymmetric tape risk runs the other way — fresh allegation-driven selling, not short-cover-driven buying — because the float is thin and a credible new short thesis would land into a market with no positioning offset.
Short-thesis ledger — Culper Research and the dismissed class action
The dominant thesis risk in this name is not positioning — it's a single credible public short report and the litigation it spawned. Culper Research's September 19, 2024 report, "Kaspi.kz (KSPI): The NASDAQ-Listed Fintech Moving Money for Criminals and Kleptocrats," is the only publicly known activist short campaign and remains the canonical bear narrative.
The legal vehicle is gone but the disclosure questions are not. Five allegation strands — Russia exposure, Magnum daughter-management, Portmone counterparty, Kolesa valuation, ALSECO counterparty history — were not independently adjudicated; the court dismissed on legal grounds, not factual rebuttal. Each year's 20-F Item 7B is the live arena. The FY2026 20-F's related-party note and the first Section 404(b) auditor attestation are the two disclosure events that would close or re-open the file.
The price tape confirms the asymmetry. KSPI's 2024 high of $131.76 (July 18, 2024) preceded the Culper drop; the May 2025 dismissal began the rebuild; the April 2026 Tencent-led secondary purchase from Baring Vostok and the 3.5× oversubscribed IG bond have anchored the recovery, but the ADS at $92.85 (May 26, 2026) remains ~30% below the pre-Culper peak. The market continues to discount some residual probability of disclosure repricing.
Borrow pressure and public net-short disclosures
Neither of these channels yields useful evidence on KSPI:
The absence of borrow-stress evidence is itself a signal. A 0.89%-of-outstanding short position on a $17.8B market-cap NASDAQ name with ~525K-share ADV would normally be trivially easy to borrow. The pipeline did not surface any public hard-to-borrow designation, fee-spike commentary, or locate-difficulty mentions. If the borrow were tight, it would show up in Ortex/S3-style commentary that none of the search runs captured.
Market setup — how positioning interacts with catalysts
The implication for a portfolio manager: the positioning data tells you almost nothing; the thesis-risk ledger tells you everything. Sizing should be calibrated to the probability and impact of a Culper-style follow-on or an ICFR re-failure, not to short-interest-driven squeeze potential. A new credible short report into 0.89% short interest, thin ADV, and 46% insider ownership is the bear's free roll — there is no positioning offset.
Peer context
Peer short-interest data was not staged and the search runs did not return reliable cross-name reported short-interest numbers, so the peer comparison is qualitative only. The point is structural rather than numerical: emerging-market fintech ADSs with founder-controlled boards and concentrated single-country exposure are a natural target set for activist short campaigns, but Kaspi is the only name in this peer set carrying an active, unrebutted activist allegation file.
Evidence quality and limitations
What this page can and can't say. It can say: positioning is benign and falling, the float is thin, the Culper allegation file is live in substance even though the legal vehicle is dismissed. It cannot say: what the FY2026 20-F will disclose, whether a second short report is forthcoming, what the current borrow fee is in basis points, or how peer short interest stacks up numerically. The first two are unknowable; the second two are open research questions worth a follow-up if a new short campaign emerges.
Bottom line for a PM
Positioning is not the story; thesis-risk is. The April 30, 2026 FINRA print of 0.89% / 2.4 days to cover sits inside "noise" range for a $17.8B mid-cap fintech ADS — not crowded, not stressed, not squeezable. The investment-case risk lives in the unrebutted Culper allegation file (Russia exposure, Magnum daughter-management, Portmone, Kolesa, ALSECO) plus the load-bearing 2026 disclosure events (FY2026 20-F related-party note, first Section 404(b) ICFR attestation). Size to the tail of a new short report into a thin float, not to a squeeze that the data does not support.