Key Words: ‘Big Short’ investor who cashed in on the financial crisis explains how he’s profiting from coronavirus ‘stampede’

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‘The hysteria appears to me worse than the reality, but after the stampede, it won’t matter whether what started it justified it.’

That’s Michael Burry, of “The Big Short” fame, explaining to Bloomberg News why he plans on sticking to his “significant” bearish bet during this nasty market downturn.

Burry, the doctor-turned-investor who made a killing betting against the housing sector in the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis, said the coronavirus outbreak is delivering a “potential trigger for the unwinding of the passive investing bubble.”

At last check, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -9.04% was down more than 2,000 points in the latest selloff, while both the Nasdaq Composite COMP, -8.13% and the S&P 500 SPX, -8.21% were more than 7% lower.

“No one knows how long it will last, and so people have a valid reason to sell,” Burry told Bloomberg. “If you are in stocks because they have been going up and because the central banks always could apply the brakes to any sell-off, well, the those pre-conditions are not currently valid.”

Read: There’s a bubble in passive investing, says Michael Burry

So, he’s in no hurry to close out his bearish bet.

“I would say despite the viciousness of the sell-off, there has not been enough time for the buy-the-dip mentality to truly go away,” he said. “But the fear in the markets is being paralleled by growing fear of the virus, and the twofer is toxic to market sentiment.”

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