Compare / Warren Buffett vs Michael Burry
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Track Record
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AT A GLANCE
INVESTING STYLE
Warren Buffett
Buffett's approach is simple to describe and almost impossible to copy. He buys great businesses at fair prices and then just...
holds them. Forever.
He calls it "buy and hold" but that undersells it — he means hold until the sun burns out. He looks for companies with a real unfair advantage over competitors.
Something that protects them from being wiped out. He calls it a "moat" — like the water around a castle.
Think Coca-Cola. Everyone knows it.
Nobody can replicate it. He puts a LOT of money into a small number of bets — usually his top five holdings make up over 70% of everything.
Most fund managers would have a panic attack at that level of concentration. Buffett calls it being convicted.
His old mentor Graham taught him to hunt for cheap, beaten-down companies and flip them fast. Charlie Munger, his business partner for 45+ years, talked him out of that.
Munger said: just buy the best businesses you can find and never sell. Buffett admits that shift made him hundreds of billions of dollars.
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.
FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY
Warren Buffett
Rule No. 1: Never lose money.
Rule No. 2: Never forget Rule No.
1. Buy businesses, not stocks — the distinction matters more than most investors realize.
Let compounding do the heavy lifting and get out of its way. Never use debt to invest.
Be fearful when others are greedy, greedy when others are fearful. Time in the market destroys timing the market in every long enough data set.
For most people, a low-cost S&P 500 index fund will outperform almost any active strategy, including most professional money managers — including, he's said, what most of his estate will go into after he's gone.
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.
RISK TOLERANCE
Warren Buffett
Buffett's whole thing is: do so much homework that the risk basically disappears. He doesn't diversify across 500 stocks to protect himself — he researches 10 companies so deeply that he's more confident about those 10 than most people are about anything.
He never borrows money to invest. Ever.
He keeps a mountain of cash at Berkshire — over $100 billion sitting around doing nothing — specifically so he can swoop in when everyone else is panicking and selling cheap. He once called derivatives "financial weapons of mass destruction" back in 2002.
Wall Street laughed. Then 2008 happened and Wall Street stopped laughing.
He doesn't predict where the stock market is going. He predicts whether a business will still be dominant in 20 years.
That's it.
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.
THE PLAYBOOK
Warren Buffett
Despite a $120B net worth, Buffett still lives in the same gray stucco house in Omaha he bought in 1958 for $31,500. He drives himself to work.
Breakfast is McDonald's — he orders based on his mood: $2.61, $2.95, or $3.17. He plays bridge obsessively, often online with Bill Gates.
He drinks multiple Cokes a day (Berkshire owns a large stake in Coca-Cola; coincidence is left as an exercise to the reader). He has pledged to give away more than 99% of his wealth, primarily to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and his children's foundations.
He takes a $100,000 annual salary from Berkshire. He does not own a smartphone.
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.
BIGGEST WIN
Warren Buffett
Apple. Berkshire started buying Apple in 2016 — late by any tech investor's standard, from a man who spent decades insisting he didn't understand technology.
By 2023, the position had grown to over $170 billion, returning more than 800%. Buffett called it the best business he'd ever seen and admitted he should have bought it earlier.
Honorable mention: American Express in 1963 during the Great Salad Oil Scandal, when he put 40% of the Buffett Partnership into AmEx at distressed prices while the rest of Wall Street was running away.
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.
BIGGEST MISTAKE
Warren Buffett
Buying Berkshire Hathaway. He bought it in 1962 as a cigar butt — a cheap, dying textile company — and then kept it instead of winding it down into a clean insurance holding company.
The C-corp structure meant decades of tax drag. He has estimated this single mistake — triggered partly by spite after the owner tried to lowball him on a buyout — cost Berkshire and its shareholders roughly $200 billion over 50 years.
He also admits missing Google and Amazon, both of which he understood well enough to buy and simply didn't.
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.
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett was born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1930. He bought his first stock at age 11 — three shares of a company called Cities Service.
He paid $114. He was eleven.
By 14, he owned a 40-acre farm and had filed his first tax return. He applied to Harvard Business School and got rejected.
Best thing that ever happened to him, honestly. He ended up at Columbia instead, where he met Benjamin Graham — the guy who basically invented the idea of buying undervalued stocks.
After graduating in 1951, Buffett started his own investment partnership in Omaha with $105,000 from family and friends. He turned that into something much bigger, compounding at around 30% per year for over a decade.
Then in 1969, he shut it down and quietly took over a dying Massachusetts textile company he had bought partly out of spite. That company was Berkshire Hathaway.
What happened next is the greatest investing run in history — and it started with a grudge.
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.
COMPANIES & ROLES
Warren Buffett
His main vehicle is Berkshire Hathaway — a company he took over in 1965 when it was a dying textile mill. He basically gutted the textile business and turned the whole thing into a giant money machine that owns other businesses.
Today it's one of the most valuable companies on earth. On the stock side, his biggest bet is Apple — worth over $175 billion at its peak.
He also owns huge chunks of Bank of America, Coca-Cola (since 1988 — he really doesn't sell), American Express, and Chevron. Then there are the companies Berkshire owns outright.
GEICO, one of the biggest car insurers in America. Burlington Northern Santa Fe, a massive railroad.
Dairy Queen, See's Candies, Duracell. Basically a random collection of boring, cash-generating businesses that he loves precisely because they're boring.
His first fund — Buffett Partnership Ltd. — ran from 1956 to 1969.
He returned around 30% per year while the market did 8.6%. Then he shut it down, said he couldn't find enough cheap stocks, and walked away at the top.
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.
EDUCATION
Warren Buffett
University of Nebraska–Lincoln (B.S. in Business Administration, 1950).
Columbia Business School (M.S. in Economics, 1951) — the only school that mattered, where he studied under Benjamin Graham and got his only A+.
He also spent two years at the Wharton School before transferring. Harvard Business School rejected him.
He's described that rejection as one of the luckiest things that ever happened to him.
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.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
Warren Buffett
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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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