Michael Burry Stock Portfolio: 10 Stocks To Buy Now

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In this piece, we will take a look at the top ten stocks in Michael Burry's latest stock portfolio. If you want to skip our introduction to the well known investor and how his biggest recent bearish calls have fared, then take a look at Michael Burry Stock Portfolio: 5 Stocks To Buy Now.

Michael Burry is perhaps one of the most well known financial figures, particularly for retail investors. This is because he was among the few in the finance industry that successfully predicted the 2008 stock market crash and rose to fame after a movie described his thought process and decision making. This cemented his place in popular culture and any statement that Dr. Burry makes is scrutinized and widely reported by the media.

However, while Dr. Burry's (he's a medical doctor and not a Ph.D in case you're wondering) 2007 call proved to be correct, he hasn't had much luck (thankfully?) since then. For instance, he predicted in 2020 that the shares of Elon Musk's Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) would drop. This led Dr. Burry to take a short position in Tesla's shares, one which didn't prove to be fruitful back then.

Fast forwarding to 2023, he shook the markets once again earlier this year when his hedge fund Scion Capital's SEC filings for the second quarter revealed that Dr. Burry was shorting the creme de la creme NASDAQ 100 index and the S&P 500. These are the two most widely followed stock indexes in the U.S., and both posted strong returns for the first half of 2023 on the back of a hype rally fueled by artificial intelligence. Scion Capital's SEC filings revealed that Michael Burry had bought $1.6 billion of put options that targeted the two indexes. A put option fixes the price at which an investor can sell an underlying security, so if the value of this security drops, then a sale at a higher price can enable the owner to book a profit.

However, it appears that the investor has had a change of heart when we look at his firm's latest SEC filings for the third quarter of this year. This is because the latest filings show that he has completely exited both of these, suggesting that he is no longer bearish on at least equities that are part of the two indexes. During Q3, the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ 100 fell by 3.6% and 3%, respectively, and given the way that put options are structured, Dr. Burry really didn't fork out $1.6 billion for his bearish bets. This is because the $1.6 billion figure is the notional value of an options contract, and the value that an investor actually pays for the contracts is the market value which is substantially lower than the notional value. In fact, this difference is so low that it's possible to have a position with a notional value in the billions by just investing a couple of million dollars. For Dr. Burry's put options, some estimate that he actually spent $26.5 million to amass a $1.6 billion stake.