New York, July 10, 2026, 15:11 EDT
Whirlpool Corporation NYSE:WHR shares gained as much as 10.5% Friday after fresh numbers showed short interest had grown to above 20% of the company’s float. The stock was still up 6.8% at $40.43 near 3 p.m. in New York, after reaching $41.85.
Short interest in Whirlpool climbed to 13.13 million shares as of June 30, a 9.82% increase from the last report and about 21.21% of the company’s public float, according to FactSet. The data, published by FINRA on Friday, is from their regular twice-monthly update and doesn’t reflect real-time positions.
If shorts had kept their June 30 position, they’d be looking at about $34 million in paper losses from Friday’s late pop. At the highest point in the session, that paper loss would have been closer to $52 million. The gross value of the bet at the latest price was around $531 million, or 22% of Whirlpool’s market cap. The estimates don’t show if individual funds covered their trades.
The move was mostly about Whirlpool. The stock beat two public appliance rivals, a homebuilders fund, and the wider U.S. market.
| As of 3 p.m. EDT | Price | Friday change |
|---|---|---|
| Whirlpool Corporation NYSE:WHR | $40.43 | +6.8%; session high +10.5% |
| Hamilton Beach Brands Holding Co. (NYSE:HBB) | $21.29 | up 2.8% |
| SharkNinja Inc. (NYSE:SN) | $152.03 | rose 2.2% |
| iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (NYSEARCA:ITB) | $98.33 | added 1.5% |
| SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust NYSEARCA:SPY | $754.63 | up 0.4% |
Bearish bets were down mid-month but jumped back up by June 30. Another 1.17 million short shares added to the chance of a squeeze if the stock price moved higher, since shorts may have to buy back shares to close.
| Short-interest settlement date | Shares sold short | Change from prior report | Scheduled publication |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 15 | 11.96 million | down 3.8% | June 25 |
| June 30 | 13.13 million | up 9.82% | July 10 |
The setup still looks tough. U.S. existing-home sales dropped 2.4% in June, coming in at an annual rate of 4.09 million, which missed the 4.20 million forecast by economists. The median price hit a record $440,600. National Association of Realtors chief economist Lawrence Yun said the sharp monthly moves “show how sensitive home buyers are to affordability conditions.” National Association of REALTORS®
“Affordability challenges are most acute for lower-income households and first-time buyers,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. Whirlpool’s CEO Marc Bitzer pointed to a similar trend in May, saying, “Consumers are holding back on replacing products and rather repairing them.” Spokesman-Review
Whirlpool’s Q1 numbers paint a rough picture for margins. Revenue dropped 9.6% to $3.27 billion. Ongoing adjusted EBIT margin tumbled to 1.3%, down from 5.9% a year ago. Adjusted earnings flipped to a loss of 56 cents per share after a $1.70 per share profit. The company kept its 2026 outlook at about $15 billion revenue and $3.00 to $3.50 adjusted EPS.
Whirlpool is betting on higher prices. The company boosted its promotional pricing by roughly 10% in April and is planning another 4% list-price hike in July, the biggest moves in over ten years. Management is making a clear trade-off: higher prices have to lift profit before weak demand pushes more buyers to opt for discount models, repairs or to hold off purchases.
The rally could snap back if short covering slows. The June 30 position might have shifted already. Higher appliance prices could push volume lower. Whirlpool’s new $2 billion in secured bonds comes with coupons of 7.5% and 7.875%, adding up to about $154 million a year in gross interest. The deal refinanced older debt, so not all of that is new cost, but it shows what it takes to fix the balance sheet.
Friday’s move is more about how the market is set up than about Whirlpool fixing its earnings issues. With 20% of the float sold short, a rebound can get fueled by covering. Whirlpool still has to prove July’s price hike actually helps margins before it gets help from housing turnover.