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The Big Short Guy Just Bet $1 Billion That the AI Bubble Pops

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Michael Burry, who famously shorted the US housing market before its collapse in 2008, has bet over $1 billion that the share prices of AI chipmaker Nvidia and software company Palantir will fall — making a similar play, in other words, on the prediction that the AI industry will collapse.

According to the Securities and Exchange Commission filings, his fund, Scion Asset Management, bought $187.6 million in puts on Nvidia and $912 million in puts on Palantir, as CNN reports.

Burry similarly made a long-term $1 billion bet from 2005 onwards against the US mortgage market, anticipating its collapse. His fund rose a whopping 489 percent when the market did subsequently fall apart in 2008.

It’s a major vote of no confidence in the AI industry, highlighting growing concerns that the sector is growing into an enormous bubble that could take the US economy with it if it were to lead to a crash.

“This new disclosure suggests that he now believes that there is an AI bubble which is due to pop,” Quiver Quantitative cofounder James Kardatzke told The Telegraph.

Investors have poured tens of billions of dollars into firms like Nvidia and Palantir, ballooning their valuations to historic levels. Nvidia recently closed with a market cap of $5.04 trillion, becoming the first company ever to cross the $5 trillion threshold. Palantir’s market cap is also up over 150 percent year-to-date. Its current valuation is upwards of 200 times its forward earnings, spreading fears that it may be grossly overvalued.

The news of Burry’s latest short comes amid a significant AI tech selloff. Shares of Nvidia and Palantir dropped just under four percent and nine percent respectively on Tuesday, indicating shaky confidence that AI companies will be able to justify their enormous valuations due to flagging revenue growth.

Investors are also growing skeptical as the AI industry turns to making major deals amongst each other; circular financing that has further stoked fears of an AI bubble. Experts have been predicting a reality check for a tech-heavy stock market that has ballooned out of proportion.

Burry is clearly in his element. Last week, he posted on X-formerly-Twitter for the first time in two years, with a picture of actor Christian Bale, who portrayed him in the 2015 film, “The Big Short.”

“Sometimes, we see bubbles,” he wrote in the caption. “Sometimes, there is something to do about it. Sometimes, the only winning move is not to play.”

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