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condor1

01/26/26 3:52 PM

#117822 RE: condor1 #117821

AI Overview
A dark pool in stocks is a private, off-exchange trading venue where large institutional investors buy and sell huge blocks of shares anonymously, hiding their intentions from the public market to avoid significantly moving stock prices and to potentially get better execution. While they offer discretion and lower costs for big players, they lack transparency, raising concerns about fairness for retail investors and potential conflicts of interest, though regulations require eventual trade reporting.
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JonDoe1

01/26/26 4:00 PM

#117824 RE: condor1 #117821

You know darn well that OFF EXCHANGE = EUROPE SHORTING
You don't even understand what off exchange means. It simply means that it wasn't traded on a major exchange like NYSE, etc. Try harder.
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NotTheRealBeeny

01/26/26 4:05 PM

#117825 RE: condor1 #117821

I posted the effing direct link.
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NotTheRealBeeny

01/26/26 4:11 PM

#117827 RE: condor1 #117821

You're mixing up 2 different things on purpose (deliberately).

Short Interest (FINRA) = open short positions. For AABB it’s 532 shares and 0.00% of float. No squeeze.

Off-Exchange Short Volume (FINRA) = daily trades marked short on US off-exchange venues (ATS/internalizers). It is not Europe, and it is not “short interest.” High short volume can happen with near-zero short interest because market makers short intraday for liquidity and then flatten.

If you want to claim a squeeze, you need rising short interest and tight borrow. Instead, the data shows the opposite.

Who is the deceiver?