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The financial analyst who foresaw the 2008 economic collapse might soon be vindicated once more.
Michael Burry, renowned for his accurate prediction of the 2008 financial crisis and depicted in the film “The Big Short,” has recently placed a significant bet—over $1 billion—that the current surge in AI-driven stocks on Wall Street will ultimately falter.
Signs of instability are beginning to emerge. U.S. technology stocks are heading towards their worst weekly performance since the market turbulence caused by Donald Trump’s tariffs in April, often referred to as his ‘liberation day’ for global markets.
Eight leading AI companies, including giants like Nvidia, Meta, Palantir, and Oracle, have collectively seen a massive $1.1 trillion wiped off their market valuations since the previous week concluded.
As of midday trading in New York, the S&P 500 had dipped by 1.2 percent, the Nasdaq by 2 percent, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average had fallen 300 points, or 0.7 percent. This downturn is positioning the Nasdaq for a 4 percent weekly loss, marking its steepest drop since the tariff conflicts during Trump’s administration.
Burry specifically bet that the value of stock for Nvidia and Palantir — two of the market’s hottest AI plays — would fall, and those two have been hardest hit.
Shares of Nvidia — the world’s most valuable company — tumbled another 4 percent Friday, leaving them down 13 percent for the week. Palantir has plunged 17 percent since Monday,
Filings show Burry’s hedge fund, Scion Asset Management, disclosed put options worth about $900 million against Palantir and $187 million against Nvidia. A put option is a financial bet that pays off if a company’s share price falls.
Michael Burry, founder of Scion Capital and the real-life investor behind The Big Short, has made a fresh billion-dollar bet against the AI boom. Here he poses for a portrait in Cupertino, California in September 2010
Nvidia shares plunged 13 percent this week, wiping hundreds of billions from its market value as fears grow the AI boom is losing steam
CEO Jensen Huang made things worse by admitting that ‘China is going to win the AI race.’ He later tried to walk back the remark, but investors were already spooked.
Meanwhile, concerns are mounting over OpenAI’s finances. CFO Sarah Friar this week floated the idea of a government ‘backstop’ to fund the company’s $1.4 trillion infrastructure commitments, while CEO Sam Altman rushed to calm markets, insisting OpenAI ‘does not want government guarantees.’
The turbulence has stoked fears of a broader tech correction — and Burry’s bearish bet is suddenly looking spot on.
Despite the carnage in tech stocks, some investors are clinging to hopes that the year could still end on a high.
Markets are watching closely for an end to the prolonged government shutdown in Washington and a possible December interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve — two moves that could help ease pressure on Wall Street.
Analysts also point to the Supreme Court’s growing skepticism over Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff plan and the next round of corporate earnings as potential turning points.
‘There’s still hope for a year-end rally once the shutdown ends and the tariff situation is resolved,’ said Louis Navellier, founder of Navellier & Associates.
‘If Nvidia posts strong earnings later this month and the Fed cuts rates in December, we could still go out on a high. Corrections like this are normal, not something to panic over.’
Palantir stock tumbled 17 percent since Monday, its steepest drop in months, as investors abandon once-high-flying AI names
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is heading for a 3.6 percent weekly loss — its worst performance since Donald Trump’s tariff-driven sell-off
Margot Robbie in The Big Short, where she famously explained complex financial jargon from a bubble bath — a scene that turned the 2015 film into a pop-culture hit
Christian Bale as Michael Burry in The Big Short ¿ the role that won him an Oscar nomination and made Burry a household name
But beneath the optimism, warning signs are flashing across the economy. A new University of Michigan survey on Friday showed consumer sentiment nearing record lows, suggesting Americans are losing confidence fast.
And just a day earlier, outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas revealed that layoff announcements in October hit their highest level for that month in 22 years — underscoring fears that the job market may finally be cracking.
The company, which tracks workforce cuts, said AI adoption and corporate cost-cutting are driving the losses.
‘Some industries are correcting after the hiring boom of the pandemic,’ said Andy Challenger, the firm’s chief revenue officer. ‘Those laid off now are finding it harder to quickly secure new roles.’
The contrast is stark: Silicon Valley is pouring trillions into data centers and chips — even as ordinary Americans like 42-year-old HR specialist Chelsea Walker, laid off from TikTok last year, struggle to find work.
‘My home is at stake right now and my prospects are extremely thin,’ Walker told the Daily Mail. ‘I worry day and night about what I’m getting ready to lose.’
With Wall Street’s high-flying tech names suddenly grounded and layoffs surging, Burry’s warning of an ‘AI-fueled meltdown’ may be coming true sooner than anyone expected.