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GME Off-Exchange Volume %

The share of GameStop's daily volume that prints off the lit exchanges — wholesaler-internalized retail orders, ATS (dark-pool) volume, and other FINRA-reported flow. Charted from public FINRA daily files. This is not the same as short volume %. High off-exchange % is normal for heavily retail-traded stocks; the page makes the math and the framing transparent so you can read it on your own.

Off-exchange % over time

Daily series with selectable lookback (3M / 6M / 1Y / All) and a price overlay toggle. Each point is one trading day; gaps are holidays or days where the FINRA file hasn't posted yet.

See off-exchange % alongside live flow, dark-pool prints, and short interest.

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Caveats — read these before drawing conclusions

The percentage is hard data. The popular interpretation is not. Treat these as first-class context.

GME off-exchange volume — FAQ

What is GameStop's (GME) off-exchange volume %?

The share of GME's daily trading volume that prints OFF the lit exchanges — through FINRA's Trade Reporting Facilities. This page computes it as FINRA-reported off-exchange volume ÷ Yahoo consolidated daily volume. GME's off-exchange % typically runs in the 40–60% range.

Is this the same as short volume %?

No. Off-exchange % is FINRA-reported off-exchange volume ÷ consolidated tape total. Short volume % is FINRA short volume ÷ FINRA total volume — a smaller ratio on a smaller denominator. They get conflated; they measure different things.

Why is GameStop's off-exchange % so high?

It's normal for retail-heavy stocks. Most retail orders are routed to wholesalers (Citadel Securities, Virtu, others) for internalization via payment for order flow. Those trades print to FINRA's TRFs, not the lit exchanges. Elevated off-exchange routing is not, by itself, evidence of manipulation or price suppression.

Where does the data come from?

Off-exchange volume from FINRA's public Consolidated NMS Daily Short Sale Volume File (cdn.finra.org/equity/regsho/daily/CNMSshvol*.txt). Consolidated tape total from Yahoo Finance daily OHLC. Both are free, public sources.

How recent is the data?

FINRA publishes T+1 — the most recent trading day's number typically appears the next business day.

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Informational and educational only — not financial advice. Figures sourced from FINRA and Yahoo Finance; community interpretations are clearly attributed as such.