Short Interest & Thesis
Short Interest & Thesis — Sagility Ltd (SAGILITY)
Bottom line
Short interest is not decision-useful for Sagility. India does not publish aggregate short-interest for listed equities, no deterministic source is staged for this name, and broad web/forensic search across credible financial media and short-thesis databases surfaced zero short-seller reports, activist campaigns, accounting allegations, regulator probes, or borrow-pressure flags. The real market-structure risk — 100% of EQT's residual 50.95% promoter stake pledged against external financing, plus a methodical post-IPO distribution tape — is supply-side overhang, not short positioning, and is owned by the People and Web Research tabs.
Short-interest signal
Public short thesis
Real market-structure risk
Read this page for the limitations, not the signal. The institutional answer here is that the information that would normally drive a short-interest read does not exist for this market. Treat the pledge / OFS overhang and the technical-distribution setup — both already covered elsewhere in the deck — as the substitute positioning lens.
1. What the data pipeline actually staged
The deterministic short-interest fetcher returned zero rows across every short-interest table because no public/official source for aggregate reported short interest is configured for the Indian market in this pipeline version. The manifest is explicit:
The pipeline did stage one auxiliary number worth surfacing here: 20-day ADV is 17.21M shares (₹725M, ~$7.6M) at the 5-Jun-2026 reference close of ₹40.02. That ADV is the only legitimate liquidity anchor available for any "crowding vs liquidity" math on this page — see Section 4.
2. Source-classification scoreboard
To be explicit about what each category would and would not tell us:
Three of eight rows are unavailable because India's disclosure regime does not produce them; two are none surfaced despite explicit search by the forensic and web-research agents; only the technical setup carries any positioning colour, and it is not a "short" signal in the institutional sense.
3. Why the standard short-thesis ledger is empty
The forensic agent's web crawl and the web-research agent's broader search both ran explicit short-seller queries (Hindenburg-style dossier sites, "Sagility fraud", "Sagility short report", SEBI enforcement search, US SEC enforcement search, Indian audit-resignation news). The findings:
The closest thing to a "thesis risk" surfaced by the dependency research is adjusted-stack overstatement flagged by the forensic tab — Adjusted PAT margin runs 280–500 bps above GAAP because management strips out earn-outs, SARs, intangible amortisation and "exceptional" items. That is a valuation discount argument (rerate the multiple to GAAP economics) rather than a short thesis (it does not imply a falling stock or an unraveling earnings story).
4. The crowding-vs-liquidity check we can do — and what it tells us
Even without a reported short-interest number, we can size what a hypothetical short position would have to look like to be considered "crowded" against this name's liquidity. The point is to show how cheap a meaningful short would be to cover, not to claim one exists.
Setup: ~4.68B shares outstanding implied; ~49% public float post-Nov 2025 OFS = ~2.29B float shares; 20-day ADV = 17.21M shares. The table shows that even a 2% of float short would clear in ~5 trading days at full participation. Translation: for crowding to be material on this name, total short interest would have to be implausibly large relative to anything Indian SLB volumes typically support. We have no evidence it is.
5. Borrow / SLB — what we can and cannot say
SLB activity may exist for SAGILITY, but no public symbol-level borrow tape is available to confirm it, and dependency research mentions no locate friction or borrow-cost pressure. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence — but tightness should not be assumed without it.
6. The market-structure pressure that is real (and is not short interest)
What looks like "short pressure" on the tape is actually three distinct, well-documented supply-side phenomena owned by other tabs. Re-stating them here so the short-interest read is correctly anchored:
Why this matters for short-interest interpretation: if a reader sees the chart and asks "is the stock being shorted?", the institutional answer is that the OFS overhang and the pledge structure are sufficient to explain the price action without any meaningful short position. A reader should not double-count by inferring large short interest from the price decline.
7. Catalyst-interaction read (positioning ≠ short positioning)
For a PM running this name, the catalysts that would interact with positioning are not "short squeeze" risks — they are long-side capitulation / supply-shock risks. Documenting them here so the page does not pretend short positioning is the variable:
None of these are "squeeze" risks. Sagility's positioning risks are long-side asymmetric — more negative catalysts (OFS, pledge, margin miss) than positive (BroadPath cross-sell, sector takeout) in the visible window.
8. Peer context — what we would compare if we could
The Indian-listed peers (IKS, Firstsource) share Sagility's exact disclosure gap; the US-listed comps (EXL, Genpact) have FINRA bi-monthly data but trade in a different liquidity/holder regime, so their SI numbers don't tell you anything actionable about Sagility's setup. There is no meaningful peer-relative crowding read to build here.
9. Evidence quality and limitations (read this)
Bottom-line decision rule: treat this page's takeaway as "short interest is not decision-useful for SAGILITY; the supply/positioning risk that is real is owned elsewhere (people-claude, research-claude, technicals-claude)." Do not infer short crowding from the tape, do not infer borrow tightness from absence of HTB mentions, and do not fill the disclosure gap with daily short-sale-volume proxies.
10. What would change the read
- A credible short-seller dossier (Hindenburg / Viceroy / Bonitas / Spruce Point / new entrant) targeting SAGILITY, EQT, or the carve-out structure.
- A SEBI show-cause notice, SEC inquiry, or auditor qualification — any of which would flip the forensic file.
- A material change in the Indian disclosure regime making aggregate short interest public.
- A jump in NSE SLB activity for SAGILITY visible in exchange data, or sell-side commentary flagging hard-to-borrow status.
- A promoter pledge default event — this would not be "short pressure" but it would trigger a supply shock the size of an EQT block deal at a price the market did not set.
Until any of those land, this page documents the absence of decision-useful short data rather than manufacturing a signal.