good morning timmy
i am assuming a short squeeze that's a result of a float lockdown will probably be a lot more explosive than just a regular squeeze, considering the fact that most, if not all of the float is owned by a small group and the MMs have to buy back all their shorts, at the price that the small group decides.
AIG is said to be going through a short squeeze now. but i hardly doubt it will experience the 3 to 10 bagger that most people on this board are waiting for with CDIV. they will both happen as a result of a short squeeze, but in CDIV, far more shares are shorted and the entire float is owned. so the imbalance of supply and demand is far more greater than it is with AIG or any other short squeeze....
thanks for your post by the way :)