Michael Burry, the famed investor known for shorting the U.S. housing market before the 2008 financial crisis, has issued a fresh warning targeting the accounting practices of major tech companies. Burry alleges that leading cloud computing and AI infrastructure firms are artificially inflating profits by extending the "useful lives" of their assets.
On social media, Burry wrote, "Understating depreciation by extending asset lives to artificially boost earnings—this is one of the most common frauds today." His hedge fund, Scion Asset Management, recently disclosed bearish positions in AI darlings
Burry highlighted that hyperscale data center operators have aggressively increased capital expenditures by purchasing
Projecting further, Burry predicts that by 2028, Oracle and
Burry warned the situation could worsen and promised more details by November 25.
This isn’t his first caution against AI hype. Last month, he posted, "Sometimes we see bubbles, sometimes we 'save the day,' and sometimes staying out makes you the winner." Scion’s 13F filings revealed $1 million put options on
Burry, immortalized in *The Big Short*, also shared charts suggesting investors should be wary of AI stocks. One showed slowing cloud revenue growth at Amazon,
Renaming his X profile "Cassandra Unchained," Burry invoked the Greek myth of Cassandra, cursed to prophesy truths no one believed.
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