NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE
ORIGINAL DATARisk Appetite
Contrarian Index
Track Record
Accessibility
Time Horizon
AT A GLANCE
INVESTING STYLE
Michael Burry
Burry is a pure fundamental analyst. He reads the actual documents.
Not the analyst summary. Not the ratings agency report.
The actual prospectus, the loan files, the footnotes. For the Big Short trade, he read thousands of individual mortgage loan documents.
Nobody else was doing that. Analysts were looking at aggregate statistics.
The aggregate statistics looked fine. The individual loans were a disaster.
His basic method: find something everyone is ignoring, do the work to understand why it''s mispriced, take a position, and wait. The waiting is the hard part.
He was short the housing market for two years before it collapsed. During those two years his investors were losing money on paper and threatening legal action.
He locked redemptions to prevent forced liquidation. He was right and it cost him two years of misery to prove it.
Mark Zuckerberg
Zuckerberg does not invest in the traditional sense — he builds and holds. He controls Meta through a dual-class share structure that gives him roughly 54% of voting power with less than 15% economic ownership, meaning no board or shareholder can remove him regardless of how the stock performs.
He has made massive bets inside Meta — on mobile (right), Instagram (very right), WhatsApp (right), VR/metaverse (wrong so far), and AI (still playing out). His investment thesis is that social connectivity is a fundamental human need and whoever owns the infrastructure owns everything.
FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY
Michael Burry
Read the documents. That is basically the whole philosophy.
Not the summary. Not the analyst report.
The actual documents. Most investors don''t do this because it''s tedious and slow and it requires a tolerance for complexity that most people don''t want to develop.
His second rule: be willing to be lonely. His housing short was a deeply contrarian position that most finance professionals thought was ridiculous.
He didn''t need their validation. He needed the math to work.
His third: factor in time when sizing a position. The housing market stayed wrong for two years.
Size your position so you can survive being right too early.
Mark Zuckerberg
Zuckerberg thinks in decades, not quarters. His core belief is that the most important technology of the next century is whoever connects people at scale — first through social networks, then through AR/VR, and now through AI agents.
He is willing to absorb years of losses on bets he believes in. He says he would rather make a big bet and be wrong than be timid and miss the next platform shift.
RISK TOLERANCE
Michael Burry
He concentrates heavily. When he has a thesis, he puts a large portion of the fund into it.
He also used leverage on the housing trade — borrowing to buy credit default swaps amplified both the wait and the eventual payoff. His risk tolerance is high in the sense that he can hold a losing position for years if the fundamental analysis is intact.
It is low in the sense that he won''t touch anything he doesn''t deeply understand. He doesn''t trade momentum or narratives.
If the math doesn''t work, he''s not interested.
Mark Zuckerberg
Zuckerberg spent $36 billion on Reality Labs — VR and AR — between 2019 and 2023, with little to show in revenue. He did not flinch.
He also bet Facebook's entire business model on going mobile in 2012, acquired Instagram for $1 billion when it had 13 employees and no revenue, and has held through Congressional hearings, advertiser boycotts, and multiple existential challenges from competitors. His personal financial risk is minimized by his dual-class share structure — he controls voting power regardless of what the stock does, so no board or activist investor can force his hand.
He can lose at scale for as long as he believes the thesis.
THE PLAYBOOK
Michael Burry
He lives in Saratoga, California. He is notoriously private — he has opened and deleted social media accounts multiple times after his market commentary attracted more attention than he wanted.
He occasionally posts about market risks and then goes quiet for months. He has a son with Asperger''s syndrome, and the experience led him to recognise similar traits in himself and pursue his own autism diagnosis as an adult.
He doesn''t do conferences. He doesn''t do interviews.
He files his quarterly 13F and lets the positions speak.
Mark Zuckerberg
He wore the same grey t-shirt every day for years — he said it reduced decision fatigue. He trains MMA and Brazilian jiu-jitsu seriously, competing in actual tournaments.
He wakes up early, spends mornings with his family, and starts work at 8am. He has spoken about designing his schedule to protect creative work in the mornings.
He reportedly does not check email first thing.
BIGGEST WIN
Michael Burry
The housing trade. In 2005, Burry read thousands of subprime mortgage loan documents and concluded the US housing market was built on loans that would eventually default in large numbers.
He persuaded Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank to sell him credit default swaps on mortgage-backed securities — essentially insurance that paid out when the mortgages defaulted. The banks thought he was wrong.
They were happy to take his premiums. In 2007–2008 the mortgages defaulted.
His investors made $700 million. Burry personally made about $100 million.
The banks that sold him the swaps needed government bailouts to survive.
Mark Zuckerberg
Acquiring Instagram for $1 billion in 2012. Instagram was growing fast, potentially threatening Facebook's dominance with younger users.
Facebook bought it. It now generates an estimated $40-60 billion in annual revenue.
Many consider it the best acquisition in tech history on a return basis — $1 billion in for what became a $100B+ asset.
BIGGEST MISTAKE
Michael Burry
The trade nearly destroyed him before it paid off. He locked investor redemptions to prevent forced liquidation of his position — probably the right call, but it created a legal and emotional nightmare that he''s described as one of the worst periods of his life.
He also closed Scion to outside investors after winning, which in hindsight was leaving behind an institutional money management career after one of the greatest trades in history. He''s never explained that decision fully.
It may have been the right one. It may not have been.
Mark Zuckerberg
The metaverse bet. From 2021 to 2023, Meta spent over $50 billion on Reality Labs — its VR and metaverse division — and generated minimal revenue.
The division lost $16 billion in 2023 alone. Meta's stock fell nearly 75% at its 2022 trough.
Zuckerberg was widely mocked, called the metaverse a disaster, and faced enormous internal and external pressure. He then pivoted hard to AI and the stock recovered.
The metaverse losses remain one of the most expensive executive vanity projects in corporate history.
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
Michael Burry
Michael Burry was born in San Jose, California in 1971. He lost his left eye to retinoblastoma as a child and has worn a prosthetic eye since.
He studied economics at UCLA and then went to Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. During his medical residency at Stanford, he posted detailed stock analysis on investor message boards between midnight and 3 AM.
The quality was consistently good enough that people in finance started paying attention.
He left his residency in 2000 — one year from finishing — to start Scion Capital with $1.1 million in loans from his family. No finance credentials.
Just a public track record and conviction. In his first full year, the S&P 500 fell 11.9%.
Scion returned 55%. From 2001 to 2008, Scion returned over 489% against the S&P 500's 3%.
Then he made the trade.
Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook from his Harvard dorm in February 2004. By the end of 2004, the site had 1 million users.
He turned down a $1 billion acquisition offer from Yahoo in 2006. By 2012, Facebook went public at a $104 billion valuation — the largest tech IPO in history at the time.
The stock immediately fell 50%. It then recovered to become one of the most valuable companies in the world.
In 2012, Facebook acquired Instagram for $1 billion (now worth over $100 billion). In 2014, it acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion.
In 2021, he rebranded the parent company to Meta to signal a pivot to the metaverse — a move that cost over $50 billion in investment and destroyed significant shareholder value before the company course-corrected toward AI.
COMPANIES & ROLES
Michael Burry
Scion Capital ran from 2000 to 2008. He closed it to outside investors after the Big Short trade — partly because managing money for clients who were screaming at him to reverse a position he knew was right was a genuinely miserable experience, and partly because he didn't need to anymore.
He relaunched as Scion Asset Management, a personal vehicle he still runs today. His current investing is more conventional — value picks, occasional activist positions, portfolio bets that get attention when his 13F filings come out.
He bought GameStop before Reddit did. He shorted Tesla.
He has positioned in water rights and farmland. He tends to be early, which is both his gift and his problem.
Mark Zuckerberg
Meta Platforms (CEO and controlling shareholder — holds majority voting control through supervoting shares). Key acquisitions: Instagram (2012, $1B), WhatsApp (2014, $19B), Oculus VR (2014, $2B).
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (co-founded with wife Priscilla Chan — philanthropic LLC).
EDUCATION
Michael Burry
BA in Economics, UCLA. MD, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 1999.
He completed three years of his medical residency at Stanford before leaving to start Scion Capital. He is technically a licensed physician who never practiced.
Mark Zuckerberg
Harvard University — studied computer science and psychology. Dropped out in 2004 to move Facebook to Palo Alto.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
Michael Burry
Burry doesnt write books.
It''s the clearest narrative account of the housing trade and covers Burry in more depth than any other source
The Greatest Trade Ever by Gregory Zuckerman is specifically about Paulsons housing bet and gives useful parallel context on how different people saw the same opportunity.
The book Burry treated as foundational — it''s where he learned to read financial documents the way he does
For context on the systemic failure that made his trade possible: Liars Poker by Michael Lewis and Too Big to Fail by Andrew Ross Sorkin together explain the environment Burry was betting against.
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Mark Zuckerberg
The Muqaddimah by Ibn Khaldun (cited as a key influence on his thinking about civilizational cycles).
He has cited Augustus Caesar as a historical figure he studies closely
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