When Memes Miss the Full Story
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) and Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR) bear Michael Burry doesn't usually do victory laps, but he's apparently had enough of the internet's selective memory. On Friday, the investor best known for calling the 2008 housing crash posted what amounts to a self-audit of his chaotic 2023 market commentary, captioned simply "/meme corrected."
The head of the now de-registered Scion Asset Management walked through the timeline of his infamous single-word warning from nearly three years ago. And here's the thing everyone forgets: it's not just about that one dramatic "Sell" tweet.
What Actually Happened
Burry's retrospective breaks down the sequence that internet lore tends to flatten. Yes, he issued a stark "Sell" directive on January 31, 2023. And yes, a banking crisis did materialize shortly after, with Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank collapsing in spectacular fashion and sending shockwaves through the financial sector.
But here's where the narrative usually stops on social media, and where Burry wants to set things straight. By March 13, 2023, he'd already identified that the crisis would "resolve very quickly," stating he didn't see "true danger." Then came the rare moment: on March 30, he publicly admitted error, tweeting "I was wrong to say sell."
That last part tends to get lost when people share screenshots of the original "Sell" post as some kind of prophetic warning. The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department stepped in, stabilized the banking sector, and the market rallied instead of crashed.
The Cassandra Complex
Burry operates under the handle @michaeljburry with the display name "Cassandra Unchained," a nod to the Greek priestess cursed to speak true prophecies nobody believed. It's a fitting persona for someone who's made his reputation on contrarian calls, though the mythology breaks down a bit when you have to publicly walk back your predictions.
The investor famously deletes most of his tweets, so this decision to repost and analyze his own timeline offers something unusual: a window into how even legendary bears sometimes overestimate the danger. It's also a reminder that financial Twitter has a habit of turning complex market calls into simplified memes that strip away all the nuance and follow-up.
By correcting the meme himself, Burry's making a point about how internet culture fixates on dramatic bearish predictions while conveniently ignoring the subsequent adjustments that serious investors make when conditions change. Sometimes the most important part of a market call isn't the call itself, but knowing when to change your mind.