‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry takes aim at Nvidia after its earnings blowout

‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry takes aim at Nvidia after its earnings blowout

‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry takes aim at Nvidia after its earnings blowout

  • Michael Burry of “The Big Short” once again took aim at Nvidia after its earnings beat on Wednesday.

  • He questioned the longevity of its chips, its stock dilution, and the “give-and-take deals” in AI.

  • Nvidia’s bosses dismissed talk of an AI bubble and touted their chips’ lifespan on an earnings call.

Michael Burry has continued his crusade against Nvidia and the broader AI boom, even after the chipmaker’s bosses reported blowout earnings and responded to two of his chief concerns.

Nvidia’s record revenue and profit last quarter, and its bullish fourth-quarter growth forecast, sent its stock up 5% in premarket trading on Thursday as investors brushed off Burry’s warnings that AI stocks are in a bubble that’s bound to burst.

The company’s finance chief, Colette Kress, said on the earnings call that Nvidia had “visibility to $0.5 trillion in Blackwell and Rubin revenue” over the course of 2025 and 2026, and estimated “$3 trillion to $4 trillion in annual AI infrastructure build” by 2030.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang opened his remarks by saying: “There’s been a lot of talk about an AI bubble. From our vantage point, we see something very different.”

Jensen Huang speaks during Nvidia's GTC conference in Washington
Nvidia CEO Jensen HuangAnn Wang/Reuters

Kress said that Nvidia’s CUDA software, which enables its older chips to run newer software and AI apps, has extended the life of the company’s systems “well beyond their original estimated useful life.”

“Thanks to CUDA, the A100 GPUs we shipped six years ago are still running at full utilization today,” Kress said. She emphasized that point by also saying “our GPU installed base, both new and previous generations, including Blackwell, Hopper, and Ampere, is fully utilized.”

Burry, the investor of “The Big Short” fame, fired back with a barrage of X posts. In the first, he doubled down on his concern that AI giants are flattering their earnings by dragging out the depreciation of their computing equipment.

The fact that Nvidia’s customers are still using older chips doesn’t mean their “useful life” from an accounting standpoint is longer, he said, as that “confuses physical utilization with value creation.”

“Just because something is used does not mean it is profitable,” Burry wrote. He gave the example of airlines retaining old planes to boost their capacity during the holiday season, even though they’re only “marginally profitable” and “not worth much at all.”

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