Key Highlights
- CAR shares jumped 10% to $235, propelled by aggressive call purchasing and short covering pressure
- Monthly gains total 118%, amplified by a limited float of only 13.05 million shares
- Hertz (HTZ) climbed 8% to $5.70, riding similar options-fueled activity
- Analyst community holds a “Reduce” consensus with an average target of $115
- Fourth quarter FY2025 results showed an EPS of -$21.25, impacted by a $518M electric vehicle write-down
Avis Budget Group (CAR) delivered dramatic price action during Tuesday’s session. The rental car giant soared from $212.60 to an intraday peak of $235 — a powerful 10% ascent powered predominantly by derivatives trading and short-covering mechanics.
This surge represents the most recent development in a month-long advance that has delivered 118% returns through the start of today’s trading. The shares also established a new 52-week peak at $214.84 before extending gains further.
Hertz (HTZ) participated in the momentum, advancing 8% from $5.31 to $5.70 through comparable call option activity. These two rental vehicle operators frequently exhibit correlated price movements — sharing industry exposure, leverage-heavy balance sheets, and elevated short interest characteristics.
The conditions surrounding CAR represent classic squeeze architecture. When substantial call purchasing impacts a stock with limited liquidity, market makers must hedge their exposure through underlying share purchases, driving prices upward and attracting additional traders, which generates further hedging requirements. This cycle repeats.
CAR operates with a float of merely 13.05 million shares and total shares outstanding of only 35.26 million. This represents a constrained supply pool. When significant short positioning encounters forceful call buying in such a restricted float, price movements can become explosive.
The Case From Both Sides
Bull positioning centers on three pillars: ongoing momentum, historical squeeze behavior patterns, and conviction that maximum discomfort for bears lies at higher price levels.
Bears arrive armed with fundamental data. Avis delivered fourth quarter FY2025 earnings per share of -$21.25, substantially missing the -$0.23 consensus forecast. The company shoulders $6.1 billion in corporate debt while maintaining negative shareholders’ equity of -$3.129 billion. A $518 million electric vehicle impairment expense severely impacted quarterly results.
Wall Street analyst consensus stands at “Reduce” with a mean price objective of $115 — representing less than 50% of current trading levels. Goldman Sachs maintains an $85 target. Morgan Stanley projects $97. Barclays reduced expectations to $95. Deutsche Bank shifted to Hold with a $128 valuation.
This substantial gap between market price and professional forecasts continues feeding the squeeze dynamic. Bears maintaining short positions will eventually face the necessity of purchasing shares to exit — providing additional upward pressure for bulls.
Ownership Movements and Institutional Positions
Some institutional players are adding exposure. Pentwater Capital Management acquired 425,000 shares during February at an average cost of $94.26 per share, representing a $40 million transaction and an 11.9% expansion of its holdings.
Company insiders control 52.8% of shares, while institutional ownership accounts for 96.35%.
In a concurrent development, Avis disclosed an at-the-market equity program permitting sales of up to 5 million shares — an announcement that previously triggered a 10% decline when initially revealed.
The company’s 50-day moving average rests at $116.57 while the 200-day moving average sits at $130.71, both significantly beneath present trading altitude.
Current market capitalization reaches $7.50 billion with a beta of 1.94, demonstrating the substantial volatility inherent in this equity.

