Nvidia name-checks Michael Burry in secret memo pushing back on AI bubble allegations

Nvidia name-checks Michael Burry in secret memo pushing back on AI bubble allegations


What Michael Burry sees in AI that has him betting big against the boom

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Why investor Michael Burry is shorting AI leaders like Nvidia and Palantir
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The fight between Nvidia and one of its loudest naysayers, investor Michael Burry, is escalating.

Following the “Big Short” investor’s series of social media posts arguing that the artificial intelligence investment boom is replaying the dotcom bubble from the 1990s, with Nvidia at the center of it, the chipmaker quietly circulated a private memo to analysts that explicitly name-checked Burry to push back on many of his claims.

“Nvidia emailed a memo to Wall Street sell side analysts to push back on my arguments on SBC and Depreciation. I stand by my analysis,” Burry said in a post on Substack, referring to stock-based compensation. “I am not claiming Nvidia is Enron. It is clearly Cisco.”

Burry has repeatedly warned that today’s AI infrastructure frenzy mirrors the late-1990s telecom buildout far more than the dot-com wipeouts investors remember. He pointed to massive capex plans, extended depreciation schedules and soaring valuations as evidence that markets are again mistaking a supply boom for durable demand.

The Nvidia memo, first reported by Barron’s, disputed Burry’s claims around depreciation life.

To Burry’s charge that customers are overstating the useful lives of Nvidia’s graphics processing units in order to justify runaway capital expenditures, Nvidia counters that its customers depreciate GPUs over four to six years based on real-world longevity and utilization patterns.

Nvidia added that older GPUs such as A100s, released in 2020, continue to run at high utilization rates and retain meaningful economic value well beyond the two to three years claimed by critics.

The memo also rejects Burry’s suggestion of “circular financing,” saying Nvidia’s strategic investments represent a small fraction of revenue and that AI startups raise capital predominantly from outside investors.

Today’s Cisco

Burry said he believes Nvidia now occupies the same position that Cisco — the key hardware supplier that powered a massive capital investment cycle — held in 1999-2000.

Just as telecommunication companies spent tens of billions of dollars laying fiber optic cable and buying Cisco gear based on forecasts that “internet traffic doubles every 100 days,” today’s hyperscalers are promising nearly $3 trillion in AI infrastructure spending over the next three years, Burry said in a Substack newsletter.

The heart of his Cisco analogy is overbuilt supply meeting far less demand than expected. In the early 2000s, less than 5% of U.S. fiber capacity was operational, Burry said. Today, he believes the industry’s belief in boundless AI demand rests on similarly optimistic assumptions about data center power and GPU longevity, he said.

“And once again there is a Cisco at the center of it all, with the picks and shovels for all and the expansive vision to go with it. Its name is Nvidia,” Burry wrote.

— CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting.



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