Short Interest & Thesis
Figures converted from JPY at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
Short Interest & Thesis
Bottom line. Reported short interest is not decision-useful for IMHDS at this snapshot: no aggregate short-position series, daily short-sale-volume series, public 0.5%-threshold holder disclosure, or borrow-cost indicator was staged for this market, and the targeted web pulls did not surface a Japan FSA "outstanding short position" record naming 3099. There is no credible short-seller report or activist short campaign in the public record on IMHDS, and the forensic file is independently clean (no restatement, no auditor change, no regulatory action). What the public record does carry, and what therefore matters for positioning risk, is a sell-side flip to bearish — consensus 12-month target $19.2 sits ~17% below the $23.2 spot, CLSA holds "high-conviction Underperform" at $13.1 (-44%), and Morgan Stanley/Nomura have downgraded into the rally — set against a stock parked at ~95% of its 52-week range, RSI 67, after a +66% twelve-month run. That is a thesis-risk and de-risking-vector finding, not a short-interest finding, and the page is built around that distinction.
Evidence quality first — what's available, what isn't, and how to read each source class
Reported short interest, daily short-sale volume, public net-short disclosures, borrow pressure, and short-seller allegations are different source classes — kept strictly separate below.
Source-class rule. Sell-side downgrades and short interest are different asset classes of evidence: a downgrade is a published institutional view; a short position is capital actually wagered against the stock. The first does not imply the second. The third — borrow pressure — is a separate market-microstructure signal again. Throughout this page, each class is labelled in prose. Daily short-sale flow is never treated as a proxy for reported short interest.
Liquidity and float — the denominator a crowding read would need
The denominator side of crowding is well measured. IMHDS is a large, liquid TSE Prime constituent: $8.1 billion market cap, 367.5M shares outstanding, ~346.5M free float (94%, FT). 20-day ADV $46M on 2.15M shares; 60-day ADV $40M. Median daily range 2.78%.
Market cap ($ bn)
Shares outstanding (M)
Free float (M)
20-day ADV ($ M)
20-day ADV (M shares)
Median daily range (%)
30-day realised vol (%)
52-week range position (%)
An aggressive 10M-share short would equal ~4.7 days of 20-day ADV — coverable inside one trading week. "Crowded short" status would require a position above the FSA 0.5% threshold (~1.84M shares); none has surfaced. Structural arithmetic argues against acute crowding even without a measured short-interest number.
A short position would need to exceed ~2M shares (~0.55% of float) before exceeding the FSA threshold, and at that size still covers in ~one trading day at 20% ADV. Forced-cover cost is low for any plausible hidden position.
Short-seller allegations — none in the public record
Targeted searches across Reuters, CNBC, Bloomberg, FT, fool.com, Investing.com, MarketScreener, SimplyWallSt, Quartr, plus upstream forensic queries, returned no credible short-seller report, no activist short campaign, no accounting allegation, no regulatory probe, and no material litigation directed at IMHDS. Closest hit: a 2015 tabloid about a Saitama woman impersonating an IMHDS affiliation — IMHDS as victim, not subject.
The internal forensic file independently aligns with this absence: forensic risk grade Watch, 24/100; one red flag (FY2026 net-income lift from a $66M one-off Shin Kong stake gain) is a presentational call-out, not an accounting allegation. No restatement, no auditor change, no qualified opinion, no material-weakness disclosure, no related-party transaction above $6M, no controlling shareholder, no anti-takeover device. ISS QualityScore on Audit and Board both register 1 (best), MSCI ESG AAA.
Clean forensic file, clean ISS/MSCI governance, no public short thesis, no regulatory action, no litigation — no unresolved short-thesis risk to size against. Thesis risk lives elsewhere.
Sell-side bear thesis — the real thesis-risk vector here
Absent any short-seller report or measured short interest, the institutional bear thesis is the published sell-side view — regulated research opinion, not capital wagered short, but the most credible adverse view a PM would refute.
Consensus 12-month target $19.2, ~17% below $23.2 spot; range $13.1–$26.2 across nine analysts (3B/5H/1S). Most cited bear cuts: CLSA (high-conviction Underperform, PT $13.1, -44%), Macquarie (Neutral, PT $13.1), Morgan Stanley (EW, PT $13.7; downgraded from OW, slashed from $20.0), Nomura (Buy → Neutral, PT $18.9 → $19.4, May 2026). JPMorgan lone large-broker bull at PT $20.0 — still below spot.
The thesis the bear desks are running is two-pronged and independent of accounting risk:
Caveat on this evidence class. Consensus targets below spot cut both ways: institutional desks have not chased the tape (useful) but how much of the view has been traded is unmeasured. Without short-interest or borrow data, "is anyone positioned for the de-rate" is unanswered. Read: credible documented bear thesis to underwrite against, but positioning-unwind risk (squeeze on a beat, panic on a miss) cannot be sized.
Catalyst interaction — where the missing data would have mattered most
Limitations — what this page is not claiming
Explicit disclaimers.
The page is not claiming reported short interest is "low" — only that no aggregate reported short interest has been staged for this market in this run, and that targeted searches did not surface a holder above the FSA 0.5% threshold. The two are different.
The page is not claiming there is no short position on IMHDS. Below-threshold positions are by definition undisclosed, and no borrow-cost/utilisation feed was available to triangulate.
The page is not treating the sell-side downgrade cluster as a substitute for short interest. The CLSA/Morgan Stanley/Nomura calls are published research opinions; they are evidence of variant perception, not evidence of capital positioned short.
The page is not treating IMHDS as squeeze-risk or de-risking-risk. Without an outstanding short position number, neither can be sized; the structural argument (large free float, $46M ADV, no founder block, no public short thesis) argues for low — not zero — risk in either direction.
The page is not extrapolating short flow from short-sale volume; short-sale volume data was not staged and would not be a valid substitute even if it had been.
Watch items — what would change the conclusion
Bottom line for sizing
Short interest is not decision-useful for IMHDS at this snapshot. No measured aggregate position, no above-threshold holder disclosure, no borrow indicator, no short-seller report — nothing to size for or against in positioning-data terms. The relevant thesis-risk vector is the documented sell-side bearish cluster (consensus PT 17% below spot; CLSA -44%; MS, Macquarie, Nomura in the bear camp) running into a tape at 95% of 52-week range. That is variant perception worth pricing in — not crowding, not squeeze risk, not a margin of safety against a short cover. A 25–50 bps haircut to the forward-multiple range for "tape-stretched / sell-side adverse" is defensible; an additional haircut for "crowded short" or "positioning unwind" is not supported by available data.