On December 19, 2025, Infosys’ American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) experienced a sudden and dramatic surge of nearly 40% within minutes of market opening. This sharp jump briefly lifted the company’s market value by tens of billions of dollars and led the NYSE to temporarily halt trading to prevent disorderly market activity.
During the spike, Infosys ADRs touched a 52 week high of around $30, marking an unusually large move for a widely followed blue-chip stock. Surprisingly, this surge occurred without any announcements, earnings reports, or material disclosures from Infosys itself. Normally, such rapid price movements require significant company-level news, but in this case, none was present.
Experts and market observers suggest that a short squeeze may have been the main driver. A short squeeze happens when investors who had bet against a stock, known as short sellers, are forced to buy shares to cover their positions as the price rises, which in turn pushes the stock even higher. In Infosys’ case, a large volume of shares (around 45–50 million ADRs) that had been lent out to the market may have been recalled, far exceeding the usual daily trading volume of 7–8 million shares. This forced buying by short sellers created strong upward pressure on the stock in a thinly traded market, amplified by the holiday season in the U.S., which reduced overall liquidity.
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