‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry makes bearish bet on Tesla

A Tesla vehicle on display at a showroom in the Aventura Mall on March 19, 2021 in Miami, Florida.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Referenced Symbols

The investment firm behind Michael Burry, who shot to fame for predicting the mortgage crisis well before anyone else, has made a bearish bet against electric-car behemoth Tesla.

According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Monday, Michael Burry’s Scion Asset Management was the owner of puts against 800,100 Tesla TSLA, -2.19% shares as of March 31, with a value of $534 million. A put is a bearish option that gives the holder the right to sell the security at a set price over a specified period.

The filing doesn’t reveal when Scion made that bet against Tesla. However, Burry, who was profiled in Michael Lewis’ “The Big Short” telling of the 2008 housing market crash, has previously made clear that he is short on that stock.

In December 2020, he announced a short against Elon Musk’s company at “ridiculous” levels. In January, he appeared to double down on that bet. “Well, my last Big Short got bigger and bigger and BIGGER too,” Burry said in a Jan. 10, now-deleted tweet. “Enjoy it while it lasts.” He appears to have deleted his Twitter account in April.

Burry also made a substantial investment on videogames retailer GameStop  GME, +12.93% in 2019, well before a trading frenzy driven by individual investors earlier this year.

A bet that Tesla shares will fall might not appear wildly oddly out of place these days. At $576 as of Monday, shares have dropped about 18%, after rocketing 743% higher in 2020. One of Wall Street’s bigger concerns surrounds its Chinese production and growing competition in that key market — Tesla’s April sales fell more than Chinese rivals NIO NIO, +1.17%, Xpeng XPEV, +1.63% and Li Auto LI, +2.72%.

Another issue for investors is a lack of big catalysts on the horizon. News around a potential one — fully self-driving cars — would be welcome, but updates aren’t expected until possibly the end of the year.

Read Next

Read Next

Barron's: Get Ready for $178 Billion of Selling Ahead of the Capital-Gains Tax Hike. These Are the Stocks Most at Risk.

The last time capital-gains taxes were hiked, in 2013, the wealthiest households sold 1% of their equity assets, a Goldman analyst found.

More On MarketWatch

About the Author