Sometimes being early looks a lot like being wrong. Just ask Michael Burry, who spent the better part of 2025 loading up on Lululemon Athletica Inc. (LULU) while the stock cratered nearly 60% from its highs. But on Thursday, Burry got his validation: Elliott Management disclosed a $1 billion stake in the athleisure retailer, and shares jumped over 6% as the market suddenly remembered how to do math.
The Window Dressing Trade
Burry's thesis was classic contrarian thinking. Through Scion Asset Management, he started buying in Q2 2025 and doubled down to 100,000 shares by Q3. His bet? Lululemon was a "window dressing" casualty—fund managers dumping a fundamentally solid brand to scrub their year-end reports clean of losers for tax-loss harvesting purposes.
The valuation told the story. At 11x forward earnings, the market was pricing a premium global brand like a no-growth commodity. Burry saw the gap between perception and reality. The company was struggling with slowing U.S. growth and what analysts politely called a "product newness" crisis, but the selling felt overdone for a brand that still commanded pricing power.
When news broke Wednesday night about Elliott's move, Burry took to social media with a knowing comment on The Wall Street Journal's report: "Sounds familiar."
Enter the Activists
While Burry waited patiently for the market to come around, Elliott Management decided to speed things up. The activist firm's $1 billion stake isn't just about buying cheap shares—it's about buying influence. The timing is surgical: current CEO Calvin McDonald is set to depart in January 2026, creating a leadership vacuum that Elliott is reportedly eager to fill.
According to reports, Elliott is backing Jane Nielsen, the former COO and CFO of Ralph Lauren, to take the top job. Nielsen built her reputation protecting premium margins in retail, which is precisely what Lululemon needs as it fends off trendier and cheaper competitors nipping at its market share.
What Happens Next
With activist heavyweights pushing for change and Burry's high-conviction position still intact, the floor for Lululemon shares appears to be set. Here's what investors should watch:
A Leadership Premium: The 6% Thursday pop was just the initial reaction. If Nielsen gets officially confirmed as CEO, expect another leg up as the market prices in operational improvements.
Margin Recovery: Elliott will likely push for a return to product-first innovation and a move away from reliance on tariff-advantaged imports that compress margins. Premium brands win on differentiation, not cost-cutting.
The Sentiment Shift: Institutional money is finally turning bullish after months of treating Lululemon like toxic waste. When the smart money flips from bearish to bullish this quickly, short sellers get squeezed.
Lululemon shares traded at $221.48 on Thursday, up 6.55% on the Elliott news. For Burry, who spotted the opportunity while everyone else was running for the exits, it's starting to feel a lot like vindication. For Elliott, it's the beginning of what could be a classic activist value unlock. And for investors who sold at the bottom? Well, that's what window dressing costs.




