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Just caught something interesting that Michael Burry posted about - the guy who called the 2008 crisis is now warning that we might be seeing a cascade effect from crypto losses bleeding into precious metals markets.
So here's what he's flagging. Burry noticed that around $1 billion in gold and silver got liquidated right at the end of January, and he's connecting the dots to falling crypto prices. His theory is that institutional investors and corporate treasurers got forced to dump their profitable positions in tokenized metals to cover crypto losses. It's basically a liquidity squeeze playing out across asset classes.
The timing makes sense too. Bitcoin tanked below $73,000 recently - that's a brutal 40% drop from where it was. Burry's take is pretty harsh though. He's saying this whole move exposes how weak Bitcoin's actual foundation is. Like, there's no real use case keeping it from falling further, according to him.
Here's where it gets concerning for certain players. If Bitcoin keeps sliding down to $50,000, mining companies could actually face bankruptcy. And Burry thinks the tokenized metals futures market could just collapse entirely - no bids, no buyers, complete washout.
What's interesting about Burry's short-term skepticism here is that he's directly challenging the narrative around Bitcoin as digital gold or a safe haven asset. Corporate treasuries holding Bitcoin? He says that's not a structural support - it's just temporary money looking for returns. The whole bull run lately has been driven by spot ETFs and institutional FOMO, but Burry sees that as pure speculation, not real adoption.
He's basically saying the emperor has no clothes. Bitcoin has no inherent value anchoring it, no widespread utility actually being used. It's all sentiment and leverage.
Now, Burry's been right about big market calls before, so when he's warning about cascading forced selling and market fragility, it's worth paying attention to. Whether you agree with his bearish take or not, the mechanics he's describing - where losses in one asset class force liquidations across others - that's a real risk to think about if volatility picks up.