The Driving Force Behind a 35% Bounce in Cliffs
posted on
Oct 15, 2014 12:49AM
Edit this title from the Fast Facts Section
By Chris Lange October 14, 2014 2:15 pm EDT
Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. (NYSE: CLF) saw a large uptick in its shares Monday and Tuesday. This bounce comes after multiple key analysts downgraded Cliffs during its fall of late. The recent climb in its share price can at least be somewhat attributable to iron ore prices, along with an old-fashioned market bounce. Reuters U.K. reported on Monday that iron ore futures are up 4%, also noting that investors were covering short positions on expectations that it may have bottomed out after pushing new lows for the past two weeks.
The gains that Cliffs has made may not just be from iron ore prices alone. Undoubtedly, the shares dropping roughly 52% to close $7.32 on Friday, from its relative high in September of $15.40, has attracted short sellers. The stock’s bounce should also be attributed to short covering, after the short sellers had to cover to lock in their gains or to get out of the way.
Short interest in Cliffs for the September 30 settlement date was recorded as 59.8 million, with 5.6 days to cover. This is the greatest number of shares short in the past 52-weeks. Short interest has increased consistently since the late-August reading. Here are some of the key analyst downgrades and analyst notes against Cliffs in the past two weeks:
Shares of Cliffs were trading up 12% Tuesday, at $9.25, from the previous close of $8.25. The range on the day was $8.35 to $9.96. Even at 2:00 p.m. Eastern Time, the stock volume was a sharp 16 million — roughly double a normal day’s trading volume.
The shares have a consensus analyst target price of $12.46 and a 52-week trading range of $7.00 to $28.98. Cliffs has a market cap of roughly $1.5 billion.