The investor said Bitcoin’s structure and growing role on corporate balance sheets make it vulnerable to a feedback loop of falling prices, forced selling, and broader value destruction.
Bitcoin is now roughly 40% below its October peak, and Burry believes this drawdown has exposed the asset as primarily speculative. In his view, Bitcoin has failed to behave like a hedge against currency debasement or geopolitical stress – a role often compared to gold or silver. While precious metals have rallied amid global uncertainty, Bitcoin has continued to slide.
A key concern for Burry is the growing number of companies that have added Bitcoin to their balance sheets. He warned that even a modest additional decline could have disproportionate effects. Using Strategy Inc., the largest corporate Bitcoin holder, as an example, Burry argued that another 10% drop could push the company billions into unrealized losses and sharply limit its access to capital markets.
From there, he said, pressure would not remain isolated. As balance sheets deteriorate, companies could be forced to sell Bitcoin to manage risk, potentially spreading stress across the broader crypto market.
Burry pushed back against the idea that institutional adoption guarantees price stability. Nearly 200 public companies now hold Bitcoin, but he emphasized that treasury assets are not permanent. Because they must be marked to market, sustained losses eventually trigger intervention from risk managers, turning Bitcoin sales into an obligation rather than a discretionary choice.
Burry also criticized the impact of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. While ETFs have expanded access, he argued they have intensified speculative behavior and tied Bitcoin more closely to traditional equities. According to his analysis, Bitcoin’s correlation with the S&P 500 has recently approached 0.50, raising the risk of synchronized sell-offs during broader market stress.
He added that Bitcoin ETFs have recorded some of their largest single-day outflows since late November, with several occurring toward the end of January. As losses deepen, Burry believes liquidation dynamics could accelerate as investors reduce exposure.
Bitcoin recently dipped below $73,000, marking its lowest level since President Donald Trump returned to the White House more than a year ago. Market participants have pointed to several factors behind the decline, including weakening liquidity, fading inflows, and a loss of macro relevance.
Unlike previous periods of turmoil, Bitcoin has not benefited from dollar weakness or geopolitical risk. At the same time, some crypto-native traders have cooled on token markets altogether, shifting attention toward prediction markets and event-based trading.
“There is no organic use-case reason for Bitcoin to slow or stop its descent,” Burry wrote, underscoring his view that price support is increasingly fragile.
While Burry does not expect a Bitcoin crash to trigger a systemic financial crisis, he warned that spillover effects are already emerging. With Bitcoin’s market value below $1.5 trillion and limited household exposure, he sees broad contagion as unlikely. Past crypto failures, such as Terra and FTX, also failed to significantly impact traditional markets.
However, Burry linked Bitcoin’s decline to recent sharp moves in gold and silver. He argued that corporate treasurers and leveraged traders have been forced to liquidate profitable positions in tokenized precious metals to cover crypto losses. Because many tokenized metal futures are not backed by physical supply, heavy selling can overwhelm physical markets, creating what he described as a collateral-driven death spiral.
According to Burry, as much as $1 billion in precious metals may have been liquidated at the end of the month due to crypto-related de-risking. He warned that if Bitcoin were to fall toward $50,000, miners could face widespread bankruptcies, while tokenized metals markets could seize up due to a lack of buyers.
Burry’s core message is that Bitcoin’s biggest vulnerability may now lie off the price chart – inside balance sheets, risk models, and the growing interconnections between crypto and traditional financial markets.
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