Michael Burry, of “Big Short” fame, discloses options bets against Nvidia and Palantir

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Markets

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“The Big Short” investor Michael Burry, famous for predicting the 2008 housing crash — and a number of crashes since that haven’t materialized quite as spectacularly — has placed massive bets against Nvidia and Palantir, according to a regulatory filing for the quarter ended September 30.

The 13-F filing released Monday discloses that Burry’s fund, Scion Asset Management, bought put options on roughly 5 million Palantir shares and 1 million Nvidia shares. The notional value of the underlying shares was $912 million and $187 million, respectively. The 13F filings do not reveal the salient details of the options contracts (each of which gives the holder the right to sell 100 shares) such as their strike price, expiry, or what was paid for them.

Burry’s move follows a surge in both stocks amid record AI enthusiasm and rising tech valuations: Nvidia jumped 50% this year and crossed the $5 trillion mark in market cap for the first time, while Palantir is up a whopping 176% on the year, with the company just posting its ninth straight earnings beat and raising full-year revenue guidance to nearly $4.4 billion.

Burry’s bets, as well as wider concerns about the company’s stretched valuation, appear to be weighing on Palantir, which has gone into reverse since posting its numbers and is now trading 6.86% lower as of 10:03 a.m. ET on Tuesday.

Nvidia was 1.8% lower as of 10:03 a.m. ET.

Last week, Burry warned of market “bubbles” on X, writing that “sometimes the only winning move is not to play.” Scion also disclosed call options on Pfizer and Halliburton, alongside holdings in Lululemon, Bruker, Molina Healthcare, and Sallie Mae.

Note: An earlier version of this article incorrectly characterized the value of the underlying shares as the total “bet size” — this has been corrected on November 13, 2025.

The 13-F filing released Monday discloses that Burry’s fund, Scion Asset Management, bought put options on roughly 5 million Palantir shares and 1 million Nvidia shares. The notional value of the underlying shares was $912 million and $187 million, respectively. The 13F filings do not reveal the salient details of the options contracts (each of which gives the holder the right to sell 100 shares) such as their strike price, expiry, or what was paid for them.

Burry’s move follows a surge in both stocks amid record AI enthusiasm and rising tech valuations: Nvidia jumped 50% this year and crossed the $5 trillion mark in market cap for the first time, while Palantir is up a whopping 176% on the year, with the company just posting its ninth straight earnings beat and raising full-year revenue guidance to nearly $4.4 billion.

Burry’s bets, as well as wider concerns about the company’s stretched valuation, appear to be weighing on Palantir, which has gone into reverse since posting its numbers and is now trading 6.86% lower as of 10:03 a.m. ET on Tuesday.

Nvidia was 1.8% lower as of 10:03 a.m. ET.

Last week, Burry warned of market “bubbles” on X, writing that “sometimes the only winning move is not to play.” Scion also disclosed call options on Pfizer and Halliburton, alongside holdings in Lululemon, Bruker, Molina Healthcare, and Sallie Mae.

Note: An earlier version of this article incorrectly characterized the value of the underlying shares as the total “bet size” — this has been corrected on November 13, 2025.

markets

SoFi bests Wall Street’s Q4 expectations, shares rise

SoFi Technologies reported better-than-expected Q4 sales and earnings-per-share numbers Friday before market open, sending the shares higher in the premarket. 

The online lender reported: 

  • Adjusted Q4 earnings per share of $0.13 vs. the $0.12 consensus estimate collected by FactSet.

  • Adjusted revenue of $1.01 billion in Q4 vs. the Wall Street forecast for $977.4 million.

  • Q1 2026 adjusted net revenue guidance of approximately $1.04 billion vs. the $1.04 billion consensus expectation, according to FactSet.

SoFi shares rallied roughly 70% last year, as the company’s growing menu of financial products — including trading, wealth management, mortgages, credit cards, and cryptocurrency trading — showed signs of gaining traction beyond its traditional base of student borrowers. But the stock has stumbled in early 2026, falling nearly 7% in January through Thursday’s close, though most of that slump seems to have been reversed this morning.

markets

Exxon Mobil beats Q4 earnings bogeys, despite softer chemical results

Exxon slid in early trading Friday despite reporting better-than-expected Q4 numbers. 

The largest US energy company by revenue reported:

  • Q4 revenue of $82.31 billion vs. analysts’ $80.63 billion consensus expectation, per FactSet.

  • Adjusted earnings per share of $1.71 vs. the $1.70 analysts predicted, according to FactSet.

  • Global production of 4.99 million oil-equivalent barrels per day vs. a 4.84 million expectation on Wall Street.

Analysts at RBC Capital spotlighted weaker margins in its chemical division, which is one factor that could be weighing on sentiment. Writing about the division’s earnings, they noted:

Chemicals products results were particularly weak (-$11m vs consensus +$271m). Notably, this is the first negative result for XOM’s chemicals product division since 4Q19, and highlights the severity of the chemicals downturn the industry is facing.

Low oil prices have dogged sales and profits at oil giants like Exxon over the last year.

But the recent surge in tensions between the US and oil-rich nations like Venezuela and Iran have contributed to rising oil prices in early 2026, with benchmark US crude oil up roughly 12% since the start of the year.

This morning’s immediate reaction might just be traders taking some of the air out of the stock — Exxon was up 17% for the year through Thursday’s close, compared to a 1.8% gain for the S&P 500.

markets

Deckers soars on record revenue thanks to Hoka and Ugg demand

Deckers had a lot to celebrate over the holiday period, with the footwear company’s shares up more than 14% as of 6:45 a.m. ET on Friday, after the Hoka and Ugg maker posted record revenue for the quarter ended December 31, 2025. The company notched:

  • Record revenue of $1.96 billion, ahead of the $1.87 billion forecast by analysts (Bloomberg consensus).

  • Adjusted earnings per share of $3.33, a whopping 21% higher than the $2.76 predicted by analysts.

Looking ahead, the company also hiked its guidance for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2026, to $5.4 billion to $5.425 billion, up from the $5.35 billion expected in the quarter before.

Deckers’ record revenue and EPS figures were “driven by the significant global demand for UGG and HOKA,” CEO Stefano Caroti said in a press release. Both brands saw “high levels of full-price selling” that resulted in a strong gross margin of 59.8%. Between the two brands, winter favorite Ugg maintained the upper hand with $1.3 billion in revenue, but Hoka saw a whopping 18.5% sales uptick (versus Ugg’s 5%) to $629 million last quarter.

Deckers also shared that the company has now repurchased stock worth $813.5 million in the last nine months, and that it expects its share repurchases to exceed $1 billion for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2026.

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