Swedish Semiconductor Company Sivers Semiconductors Falls for 4 Consecutive Days Under Multiple Short Selling Pressure
Swedish semiconductor company Sivers Semiconductors ($SIVE / $SIVEF) has fallen for four consecutive trading days.
Since May 25, when Wall Street trader AsiaFinance raised doubts, the Swedish industrial newspaper Dagens Industri featured a front-page headline "Game Over" two days ago, and today the institution Ningi Research publicly initiated short selling.
Market Mechanism: Short selling institutions continue to apply pressure as sellers, with funds flowing out of the overvalued SIVE into safer or competing semiconductor stocks, putting Sivers under pressure on its stock price and increasing financing difficulties, affecting early retail investors and bulls.
Supplementary Data: The Swedish Economic Crime Authority (ECA) and prosecutor Jonas Myrdal are investigating Sivers executives, the "meme stock guru" Serenity, and the multinational hype team behind them, involving potential insider trading and market manipulation.
Source: Public Information
ABAB AI Insight
Sivers Semiconductors, originally a photonic integrated circuit company, experienced explosive growth in 2026 due to the AI data center concept. The recent continuous short selling and investigation mark a shift from being a "meme stock" to facing fundamental scrutiny. Previous reports have pointed out concerns over revenue recognition and hollow customer contracts.
In terms of capital pathways, institutions like Ningi Research amplify doubts through public reports, while the Swedish ECA investigation targets potential information leaks and hype teams. The motivation is to profit from short selling by exploiting the contradiction between high valuations (which once saw over 2000% increases) and a 22% decline in Q1 revenue, triggering retail sell-offs that create positive feedback.
Similar to past collapses of meme stocks like Wirecard or GameStop, Sivers is currently in a phase of transitioning from retail-driven frenzy to rational pricing by regulators and institutions, highlighting the true delivery capabilities of small-cap semiconductor companies under the AI narrative.
Structural Judgment: This essentially represents a transfer of pricing power. The combined effect of multiple short selling reports and regulatory investigations will shift the pricing power of SIVE from social media hype and retail sentiment to institutional research and regulatory fact verification, achieving a rapid correction from high multiple narrative valuations to fundamental support.
ABAB News · Law of Cognition
After a 2000% increase, "Game Over" is often just the beginning. Regulatory investigations can permanently destroy meme premiums more effectively than short selling reports. A true moat is revenue that can withstand prosecutor scrutiny.