Michael Burry who famously called the great 2008 financial crisis just shut down his hedge fund.
He became a household name after he was portrayed by Christian Bale in the movie “The Big Short”.
Below is his resignation letter:

He often focused on catastrophe trades that required perfect timing.
Ultimately, he spent years being “right too early,” which in markets is the same as being wrong.
He didn’t want to relive the nightmare of being right too early again.
Burry lived this nightmare from 2005–2007:
Now, facing a similar situation with overvalued AI stocks, and a euphoric market who thinks they are all geniuses because everything keeps going up, Burry has made a different strategic choice:
Even though he is convinced of an eventual AI-bubble collapse, he refuses to endure years of public ridicule and investor revolt while waiting to be proven right.
After he quit, in his family fund, he made a $9.2 million bet using “long dated out of the money options”* that the stock Palantir (PLTR) would collapse by 70% or more by early 2027.
Why Palantir?
- Palantir is the poster child of the AI bubble
- Palantir is currently trading at an insane P/E* of 425.
To give context, below are current P/E ratios of popular tech companies:
Burry is worth around $300 million, so the $9.2 million bet he made is about 3% of this net-worth.
If Palantir collapses, depending on the speed of the collapse, he can easily make over 20× or more return on his options adding tens or hundreds of millions to his net worth.
Overall we think it’s a brilliant trade FOR HIM, for 3 reasons:
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