Michael Burry, What He Bought, What He Sold, and What He Held
I mark my calendar for the four times a year that Michael Burry is required to make his quarterly holdings public. The founder of Scion Asset Management, who gained additional fame by the portrayal of him in the movie The Big Short, is not a follower of other investors. He does his own unique number crunching and analyzing and is often at odds with mainstream investor thinking. This week he filed his 13F with the SEC, which shows his holdings of publicly traded securities as of the close of business on March 31. It is important to note that his holdings at the close of the following trading day may not be the same.
The Dramatic Holdings Shift
There has been a conspicuous shift in the holdings in Burry’s hedge fund. For the first time that I can recall, he has taken large long positions in companies domiciled in China. This includes an increase in holdings in e-commerce company JD.com Inc. (JD) and retailer Alibaba (BABA).
These positions stood at quarter-end as the largest holdings of Scion, representing 20% of securities held. Many hedge funds have gone sour on investing in Chinese tech companies, Burry isn’t necessarily a contrarian, but it is not unusual for him to be at odds with his peers. Hedge funds’ net exposure to China has dropped to 10.5% from 13.3% in January, according to data from Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Prime Services unit. If other large investors are early to the party, or late, that allows him to buy into weakness, or sell into strength – if he’s right.
The Big Position
How big are his positions? After purchasing Alibaba and JD.com in the final months of 2022 as China ended its zero covid 19 policy, Burry, who had held JD.com as of the previous two 13F filings, added to the holdings. His bigger stake more than tripled to 250,000 shares, worth $11 million, or 11% of his portfolio. The report shows his holdings of Alibaba had doubled.
It is not just notable that Burry is long, but that he held larger long positions than he has in many quarters.
The report, which is a snapshot taken just a couple of weeks after Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) shook investors in financial stocks, shows that Michael Burry jumped in and bought shares of smaller banks in the first quarter – where there is fear, there are knee-jerk reactions to take advantage of. In fact, he appears to have jumped into the middle of the firestorm adding long positions of First Republic, Pacific Western (PACW), Western Alliance, New York Community Bank, and Huntington Bank (HBAN) last quarter. Burry also bought other financial stocks, specifically Wells Fargo (WFC) and Capital One (COF). There is no indication if these worked out for the investors in his fund.
Energy, Commodities, and Other Long Positions
Burry also ended last quarter with new positions in energy and commodity stocks. These may be an inflation hedge trade. Holding cash during periods of higher inflation is akin to sitting still while watching money blow away. While there is no guarantee that the investment alternative to cash will do better, the sectors have a long history that supports the trade. Scion was invested in Coterra Energy (CTR), Devon Energy (DVN), and Sibanye Stillwater (SBSW).
Burry closed out the quarter with shares in various other companies including Zoom Video (ZM), The RealReal (REAL), and Signet Jewelers (SIG).
He still maintains his long-term position in Geo Group (GEO). Geo is the world’s second largest private “prison company.” Geo Group has the honor of being Scion’s longest held position, put on sometime after the incoming administration sought to do away with privately owned prisons. Investors interested in how Geo Group navigated this challenge and is now finding other growth opportunities to utilize its assets, may wish to attend one of three no-cost roadshows in May that are part of the Noble Capital Markets and Channelchek Meet the Management Series. (Get more information here).
Closed Out and Longest Held Positions
Scion exited its positions in Wolverine Worldwide (WWW), MGM Resorts (MGM), Black Knight (BKI), Qurate Retail (QRTEA), and SkyWest (SKYW).
Take Away
The next Scion Asset Management 13F is expected to be filed on August 15th. While current holdings are unknown, much can be discerned from what top investment managers traded at the time. This information can help guide current thinking. When he has conviction, Michael Burry is not afraid to pull the trigger, long or short. As we have seen, when he lacks conviction, he is equally unafraid to keep his powder dry and sit on the sidelines. Inflation adds a cost to sitting on the sidelines. In late March he was very long and seemed to be gravitating toward segments that were being shunned.
Managing Editor, Channelchek
Sources
https://www.goldmansachs.com/what-we-do/FICC-and-equities/prime-services/
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1649339/000090514823000408/xslForm13F_X02/primary_doc.xml
https://capedge.com/filing/1649339/0000905148-23-000408/13FHR/file/2