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Traders betting against Snap have made a fortune this year — here's how they're planning for earnings (SNAP)

Snap short sellers have made more than $400 million this year, but heading into the company's earnings report, they appear content to stand pat.

Evan Spiegel is probably happy to hear that Snap short sellers are sitting tight ahead of earnings.

Bets against shares of Snap have yielded more than $400 million for traders this year, and as the company prepares to report earnings on Thursday, some have been taking money off the table.

About one-third of short positions — bets that the stock will fall — have been 'covered' over the past week, according to data compiled by IHS Markit.

This has been reflected by falling short interest, which now sits at $952 million, down from $1.4 billion in May, data from financial analytics firm S3 Partners show.

"Shorts have not been increasing their positions to maintain their exposure," Ihor Dusaniwsky, the managing director of predictive analytics at S3, told Business Insider. "They have been happy making their mark-to-market profits and riding wave to larger returns."

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In addition to pushing short interest lower, the so-called covering of positions has also reduced the cost of borrowing Snap shares, IHS Markit says. The measure has fallen from 64% on August 1 to 2% at present time.

This scaling back of shorting activity is somewhat surprising, considering Snap's post-initial public offering lock-up saw its first round of expirations on July 29. That was supposed to unleash more shares into the market — ones that many expected would be used to borrow for shorting purposes. There's another round of expirations happening on August 14, which will free up roughly 800 million more shares.

But you can't blame traders for losing the urge to short Snap, especially a head of a potential earnings surprise after the close of trading Thursday. After all, Snap has already plunged 50% since hitting its post-IPO peak on March 3, just two days after pricing the offering.

Wall Street is expecting the company to report a loss of $0.33 per share on revenue of $185.78 million, according to data from Bloomberg.

Another metric to watch is lendable inventory —

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This "steep fall" is "generally Such a trend is unusual, especially after the lockup expiry, and it may indicate that investors are continuing to flee the stock."

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