Friday Nov 21 2025 00:00
3 min
Michael Burry, the veteran investor and insightful market commentator renowned for his prescient prediction of the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis, has issued a stark warning regarding artificial intelligence. Burry argues that the actual end-user demand for AI technologies is significantly lower than what is being advertised by major tech corporations.
Burry shared a chart highlighting AI investment agreements between tech giants like Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and Nvidia. Alongside this chart, Burry raised concerns about what he termed "questionable revenue recognition" by some of these companies, suggesting that the reported growth may not accurately reflect genuine market demand.
Burry believes that future historians may view the current AI craze as a fraudulent scheme rather than a genuine transformation. He asserts that "real end user demand is laughably small" and that many of the clients driving AI growth are being funded by the very companies selling them AI technologies, creating a self-reinforcing loop rather than widespread, sustainable adoption.
In a subsequent post, Burry described OpenAI as the "linchpin" of the entire AI boom, questioning the credibility of the startup's auditors. These warnings, which come on the heels of his public return in November, are part of a series of skeptical pronouncements regarding the surge in valuations of AI-backed tech companies. Burry has previously disclosed short positions in Nvidia and Palantir and has repeatedly accused large AI spending companies of misrepresenting data center depreciation to inflate earnings.
Burry's latest warning comes just hours after Nvidia announced stronger-than-expected third-quarter results and issued an optimistic outlook fueled by continued AI demand. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang dismissed speculation of an AI bubble, saying the demand base extends beyond hyperscale data center operators.
Despite Burry's warnings, Nvidia's stock rose more than 5% in after-hours trading, boosting broader tech and AI stocks and lifting U.S. stock index futures.
Earlier this week, Burry indicated that his firm, Scion Asset Management, has deregistered, but that he remains active in the market.
“This last go-round was essentially a friends and family owned fund,” he wrote on Tuesday. “I did not market or manage like most and did not seek to grow assets by bringing in investors I did not know. I did not want to deal with the issues I had starting Scion Capital again.”
“I still manage my own money and am active in the market,” he added.
The hedge fund manager closed his previous firm, Scion Capital, in 2008 after successfully betting against the U.S. housing market, and opened Scion Asset Management in 2013. Shortly before Scion Asset Management terminated its registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), he posted on X saying he would be “doing something better on Nov 25.”
“I am glad to be rid of the regulatory burden and the widespread misunderstanding of what my filings implied,” Burry wrote on Tuesday. “Scion Asset Management was not shut down, as it is also the vehicle through which I run other investment projects. It is no longer a RIA (Registered Investment Adviser) and does not manage money for outside investors anymore.”
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