By David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Scion Asset Management fund manager Michael Burry, who rose to fame with timely bets against housing ahead of the 2008 financial crisis, in the last quarter dumped a dozen bullish positions and replaced them with a new stake in prison company Geo Group Inc, according to filings released on Monday.
Shares of Geo Group rose 12% on Monday, the largest one-day rally in the company since June 2021, according to Refinitv data. At current prices, Burry’s position is worth approximately $3.9 million. Shares of the company, which has a market value of $852 million, are down 1.6% for the year to date.
Burry, who frequently deletes his tweets, suggested on Twitter on Sunday that the 18% gain in the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index since the start of the third quarter is likely to reverse.
“Can’t shake that silly pre-Enron, pre-9/11, pre-WorldCom feeling,” he wrote, referring to three events which contributed to an approximately 75% decline in the Nasdaq between February 2000 and September 2002.
Filings known as 13-f are one of the few quarterly disclosures that hedge fund managers make of their long positions — bets that a stock will rise — and may not reflect current holdings. Fund managers are not required to disclose short positions, which profit when a company’s shares fall.
Among the stocks that Burry sold are a stake in Facebook parent Meta Platforms that was worth $12.9 million at the end of the quarter, a $19.7 million stake in Cigna Corp, and a $23.1 million stake in Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
The Nasdaq Composite was recently up 0.43% Monday, leaving it down 16.3% for the year to date.
(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Leslie Adler)