ProAssurance Corporation (PRA) — Short Interest History
The most recent FINRA short interest report for PRA (settlement date April 30, 2026) shows 8,726,451 shares sold short , a change of 14.00% from the prior report .
Days to cover: 9.34.
Short interest history for PRA
| Settlement date | Short interest | Change | Avg daily volume | Days to cover |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 30, 2026 | 8,726,451 | 14.00% | 934,467 | 9.34 |
| Apr 15, 2026 | 7,655,061 | 9.01% | 995,668 | 7.69 |
| Mar 31, 2026 | 7,022,327 | 3.78% | 748,192 | 9.39 |
| Mar 13, 2026 | 6,766,814 | 5.95% | 672,434 | 10.06 |
| Feb 27, 2026 | 6,386,774 | 0.08% | 605,817 | 10.54 |
| Feb 13, 2026 | 6,381,354 | 7.29% | 714,462 | 8.93 |
| Jan 30, 2026 | 5,948,030 | 3.48% | 446,910 | 13.31 |
| Jan 15, 2026 | 5,747,937 | 2.13% | 494,549 | 11.62 |
| Dec 31, 2025 | 5,628,220 | 4.57% | 382,096 | 14.73 |
| Dec 15, 2025 | 5,382,201 | -3.48% | 408,697 | 13.17 |
| Nov 28, 2025 | 5,576,103 | -9.16% | 337,417 | 16.53 |
| Nov 14, 2025 | 6,138,202 | 0.24% | 453,277 | 13.54 |
| Oct 31, 2025 | 6,123,287 | 1.82% | 308,579 | 19.84 |
| Oct 15, 2025 | 6,014,089 | 3.61% | 513,933 | 11.70 |
| Sep 30, 2025 | 5,804,454 | -1.08% | 330,977 | 17.54 |
| Sep 15, 2025 | 5,867,538 | 2.30% | 400,586 | 14.65 |
| Aug 29, 2025 | 5,735,771 | 2.52% | 417,185 | 13.75 |
| Aug 15, 2025 | 5,594,521 | 36.39% | 570,637 | 9.80 |
| Jul 31, 2025 | 4,101,707 | 34.35% | 559,525 | 7.33 |
| Jul 15, 2025 | 3,052,908 | 1.36% | 926,622 | 3.29 |
| Jun 30, 2025 | 3,012,051 | 5.32% | 378,325 | 7.96 |
| Jun 13, 2025 | 2,859,853 | 5.61% | 418,330 | 6.84 |
| May 30, 2025 | 2,707,913 | 7.32% | 571,573 | 4.74 |
| May 15, 2025 | 2,523,223 | 13.58% | 629,325 | 4.01 |
| Apr 30, 2025 | 2,221,548 | 21.20% | 666,146 | 3.33 |
Frequently asked questions
- What is short interest in PRA?
- Short interest is the total number of PRA shares currently sold short but not yet covered or closed out. FINRA publishes this data twice monthly.
- How is PRA short interest calculated?
- Short interest is aggregated from member firm reports to FINRA. Every U.S. broker-dealer must report aggregate short positions in each security as of the 15th and last trading day of each month.
- What does a high short interest mean?
- Higher short interest can indicate bearish sentiment, but it also raises the potential for a short squeeze if positive news forces short sellers to cover their positions simultaneously. Compare short interest to float (short percent of float) for context.