Skip to content
Trending
June 19, 2025The U.S. added a thousand new millionaires a day in 2024: Report May 18, 2025Boeing would avoid guilty plea, prosecution over 737 Max crashes in possible DOJ deal August 30, 2025From ‘cheap food and curry houses’ to upscale dining: The rise of Indian restaurants in the U.S. July 31, 2025JPMorgan marks 1,000th branch opening since 2018 expansion plans September 27, 2025The resilient stock market may be keeping the economy out of a recession. Why that’s a bad thing August 31, 2025Here’s how the U.S. Open’s signature Honey Deuce cocktail price stacks up against inflation April 17, 2025Hermès to hike U.S. prices for iconic bags and scarves in response to Trump tariffs June 24, 2025Watch Fed Chair Powell testify live on interest rate policy before House committee June 16, 2025Luxury credit card rivalry heats up as Amex, JPMorgan tease updates to their premier cards February 7, 2025Amazon’s quarterly beats took a back seat to a couple dings we’re not going to sweat
  Monday 8 June 2026
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
  Finance  ‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry accuses AI hyperscalers of artificially boosting earnings
Finance

‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry accuses AI hyperscalers of artificially boosting earnings

AdminAdmin—November 11, 20250

Michael Burry attends the New York premiere of “The Big Short” at the Ziegfeld Theater in New York City on Nov. 23, 2015.

Jim Spellman | WireImage | Getty Images

Michael Burry, the investor made famous by “The Big Short” who recently roiled the market with a tech short bet, is accusing some of America’s largest technology companies of using aggressive accounting to pad their profits from the artificial intelligence boom.

In a post Monday on X, the Scion Asset Management founder alleged that “hyperscalers” — the major cloud and AI infrastructure providers — are understating depreciation expenses by estimating that chips will have a longer life cycle than is realistic.

More stories

Santander doubles down on UK presence amid Spain’s banking M&A turmoil

July 2, 2025

Why Wall Street’s old ‘wall of worry’ and new ‘debasement trade’ are boosting gold, bitcoin in typically volatile October

October 10, 2025

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau drops lawsuits against Capital One and Berkshire, Rocket Cos. units

March 1, 2025

Kalshi makes move to court crypto traders with tokenized betting contracts

December 1, 2025

“Understating depreciation by extending useful life of assets artificially boosts earnings – one of the more common frauds of the modern era,” Burry wrote. “Massively ramping capex through purchase of Nvidia chips/servers on a 2-3 yr product cycle should not result in the extension of useful lives of compute equipment. Yet this is exactly what all the hyperscalers have done.”

Burry estimated that from 2026 through 2028, the accounting maneuver would understate depreciation by about $176 billion, inflating reported earnings across the industry. He singled out Oracle and Meta Platforms, saying their profits could be overstated by roughly 27% and 21%, respectively, by 2028.

CNBC has reached out to Oracle and Meta for comments. Nvidia declined to comment. Burry’s accusation is a serious one, but could be hard to prove because of the leeway companies are given in estimating depreciation. CNBC was not independently able to confirm this practice was being done by the companies.

When paying for a large asset upfront — like semiconductors, servers, etc — a company is then allowed under generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, to spread out the cost of that asset as a yearly expense that is based on the company’s estimate of how rapidly that asset depreciates in value. If companies estimate a longer life cycle for the asset, they can then lower the yearly depreciation expense that hits the bottom line.

Burry, who famously bet against subprime mortgages before the 2008 financial crisis, has warned this year that AI enthusiasm resembles the late-1990s tech bubble.

Burry last week revealed seemingly fresh wagers against AI favorites Nvidia and Palantir Technologies. He disclosed put options with a notional value of about $187 million against Nvidia and $912 million against Palantir as of Sept. 30, according to a regulatory filing. The filing didn’t specify the strike prices or expiration dates of the contracts.

The disclosure prompted a sharp reaction from Palantir CEO Alex Karp, who called Burry’s wagers “super weird” and “bats— crazy.” It’s not clear whether he still holds those positions or whether they were just a hedge.

Shares of Nvidia rebounded nearly 6% on Monday after dropping 7% last week. Palantir saw its shares pop almost 9% on Monday following a 11% sell-off last week. Nvidia was lower again on Tuesday.

Burry said in his X post that “more detail” was coming on Nov. 25 and that readers should “stay tuned.”

The shutdown put jobs and inflation data on hold. Here’s when it could be back — and what it might say
Skims valued at $5 billion after new funding round as it accelerates store expansion
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Finance

Visa says new AI shopping tool has helped customers with hundreds of transactions

December 18, 20250
Finance

Billionaire fund manager Ron Baron praises beaten-up financial stock whose new CEO he compares to Jamie Dimon

December 17, 20250
Finance

Nasdaq moves to make trading nearly 24 hours. Why some on Wall Street say that’s a bad idea

December 16, 20250
Load more
Read also
Earnings

Google cloud growth tops Microsoft and Amazon as all three beat estimates on AI demand

May 2, 20260
Finance

Visa says new AI shopping tool has helped customers with hundreds of transactions

December 18, 20250
Economy

Trust these numbers? Economists see a lot of flaws in delayed CPI report showing downward inflation

December 18, 20250
Earnings

Nike tops earnings estimates but shares fall as China sales plunge, tariffs hit profits

December 18, 20250
Business

American Airlines no longer lets basic economy flyers earn miles

December 18, 20250
Finance

Billionaire fund manager Ron Baron praises beaten-up financial stock whose new CEO he compares to Jamie Dimon

December 17, 20250
Load more
    © 2022, All Rights Reserved.
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions