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Michael Burry’s Big Short Warning: Is the AI Bubble Set to Dwarf Bitcoin’s Wildest Days?

Michael Burry’s Big Short Warning: Is the AI Bubble Set to Dwarf Bitcoin’s Wildest Days?

Published:
2025-11-09 14:00:30
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Michael Burry’s big short: Is the AI bubble bigger than Bitcoin?

Wall Street’s favorite contrarian is back—and this time, he’s targeting Silicon Valley’s golden child.

Michael Burry, the hedge fund manager who famously bet against the 2008 housing bubble, just took aim at artificial intelligence. His warning? The AI frenzy could make Bitcoin’s most speculative peaks look tame.

Meanwhile, crypto bulls aren’t blinking. Bitcoin’s infrastructure keeps growing—ETF inflows, institutional adoption, and that relentless halving cycle—while AI startups burn cash faster than a meme coin rug pull.

One thing’s certain: when the guy who called the last financial apocalypse starts shorting hype cycles, even VCs might want to check their exposure. (But let’s be real—they’ll probably just double down with leveraged SPACs.)

‘Bats*** crazy’ vs. billion-dollar bets: The Palantir perspective

Enter Alex Karp, Palantir’s CEO, wielding a verbal flamethrower. Karp’s response to Burry’s big bet? The notion that anyone WOULD short AI companies is utterly absurd. He retorted:

“The two companies he’s shorting are the ones making all the money, which is super weird.”

He didn’t stop there, doubling down:

“The idea that chips and ontology is what you want to short is bats*** crazy… He’s actually putting a short on AI.”

Palantir’s numbers do back up a certain bravado. The company upgraded full-year revenue forecasts after a record Q3 and posted 173% gains over the last year.

Yet Wall Street’s obsession with AI is a double-edged sword, and even as Palantir beats forecasts, its share price can tumble 8–10% in a single breath, all thanks to valuation jitters and the swirling specter of “AI bubble trouble.”​

Nvidia’s cycle: Virtuous or viscous?

As for Nvidia, CEO Jensen Huang had his own take, downplaying investor fears.

“I don’t believe we’re in an AI bubble,” Huang asserted in a Bloomberg Television interview, immediately after announcing a slew of new partnerships and the company’s projection to generate half a trillion dollars in revenue.

Huang isn’t fazed by the bubble talk; he’s too busy selling the world’s hottest chips and projecting a multi-trillion-dollar industry. If anything, the Nvidia CEO believes the U.S. isn’t doing enough to develop AI, and its restrictive policy vis-à-vis China will ultimately hurt the world’s number-one superpower. He ruefully told reporters at the Financial Times’ Future of AI Summit on Wednesday:

“China is going to win the AI race… we need to be in China to win their developers. A policy that causes America to lose half of the world’s AI developers is not beneficial in the long term; it hurts us more.”

Still, if you peek under the hood, Nvidia’s stock (which has soared more than 50% this year) slipped 3–4% intraday on November 4, on news of Burry’s short.

And some investors remain jittery, especially with looming U.S. chip export restrictions to China and the trillion-dollar question: Is momentum fueling monstrous valuations, or is it genuine demand?

AI bubble mania meets reality: Trillions on the table, triggers everywhere

Let’s zoom out. Nvidia just became the world’s first tech firm worth $5 trillion. That’s bigger than all the banks in the U.S. and Canada combined. The “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks (including Nvidia) now occupy a regal 35% of the S&P 500’s entire market cap.

AI investment has soared past $1 trillion a year, while consumer stocks like Kraft Heinz are getting trounced. As global capital markets expert, The Kobeissi Letter, pointed out:

“There are 2 US economies: Rich vs Poor, and AI is the lifeline of it all.”

Car repossessions are climbing. Wage growth is stalling. And Americans are carrying record levels of credit card debt, with interest rates hovering NEAR historic peaks. Unless you count the influence of AI and data centers, America’s real economic growth is barely limping along, clocking in at just 0.01% according to Harvard economist Jason Furman.

Meanwhile, Wall Street’s top performers are running laps around Main Street, which is still struggling to catch its breath. The gap between winner-takes-all tech stocks and everyday households paints a pretty stark picture of today’s economy. If and when the AI bubble bursts, it’s going to hit like a Tyson left hook.

Macro analyst and goldbug Peter Schiff, never one to miss an opportunity to dunk on Bitcoin, is wholly pessimistic as ever. Not only does he believe that crypto is about to blow up, but he’s right up there with Burry on AI:

“The losses that will be suffered by Bitcoin HODLers and crypto investors will be staggering. More money will be lost in this bubble than was lost when the dot-com bubble popped. But if this signals an aversion to risk in general, look out for the even bigger AI bubble to burst.”

Yet the most poignant critic of the moment is Burry himself, betting 80% of his portfolio on the AI bubble. He mused to his audience on Twitter:

“Sometimes, we see bubbles. Sometimes, there is something to do about it. Sometimes, the only winning MOVE is not to play.”​

Technicals, tension, and the trouble with timing

If the spectacle feels familiar, that’s because it is. In the dot-com era, pet-food websites with no earnings became household names, only to crash harder than a piano from a fourth-floor window.

Today, instead of dogs.com, it’s chips and data lakes; “chips and ontology,” as Karp jibes, with RSI readings above 70, price-to-earnings ratios exceeding 200 for Palantir, and price-to-book rocketing past 69. Nvidia and Palantir are riding a wave of profitability, but also expectations that would make a seasoned gambler sweat bullets.​

The sell-off that followed Burry’s disclosure was real: Palantir shares dropped nearly 9%, Nvidia shed over 3%, and the S&P 500 retreated alongside tech sector peers Oracle and Tesla. The sell-off bled into crypto as well, with bitcoin briefly falling below $100,000 a coin for the first time since June.

CNBC reported Karp’s outrage, suggesting Burry’s actions were bordering on market manipulation as much as macro pessimism. He seethed:

“I think what is going on here is market manipulation. We delivered the best results anyone’s ever seen… I mean, these people, they claim to be ethical, but you know, they’re actually shorting one of the great businesses of the world.”

Big tech’s bubble or a decade of dominance?

Meanwhile, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has openly acknowledged that the AI market is likely in a bubble. He told reporters:

“Are we in a phase where investors as a whole are overexcited about AI? My opinion is yes. Is AI the most important thing to happen in a very long time? My opinion is also yes… When bubbles happen, smart people get overexcited about a kernel of truth.”

Still, he also argued that bubbles don’t kill revolutions, and sometimes they birth the next economy.​ Wall Street isn’t sure whether to clap or cringe. And Burry’s short has gotten them nervous.

Palantir, despite “otherworldly growth,” now has to deliver on 40–50% annual revenue expansion and 50% gross margins just to justify its price. The sector-wide rally is monumental, but a single tweet or earnings miss could knock out tens of billions in minutes.​

The punchline: Everything’s absurd; until it isn’t

Burry’s bearishness, Karp’s swagger, Huang’s angst; the AI bubble debate is a masterclass in financial melodrama. Are we witnessing history rhyming, or is tech simply flexing its muscles in a world desperate for new growth drivers?

If you trust Burry’s gut, there’s pain ahead. If you prefer your tech with a heaping side of chips (the silicon kind), maybe this is just the beginning. Karp insisted:

“I do think this behavior is egregious, and I’m gonna be dancing around when he’s proven wrong.”​

Either way, bubbles are only obvious after they burst. Until then, thank Michael Burry for keeping the punch bowl spiked (and the market narrative anything but dull).

|Square

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