Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Scion Capital====== Scion Capital was the legendary [[hedge fund]] managed by Dr. [[Michael Burry]]. Though it operated for only a few years (2000-2008), its story has become a cornerstone of modern investment lore. Burry, a former neurologist with a knack for deep-dive financial analysis, founded Scion with an inheritance and family loans. He quickly built a reputation for unconventional but highly profitable investments, guided by the principles of [[value investing]]. However, Scion Capital is immortalized for one spectacular trade: its massive bet against the U.S. [[subprime mortgage]] market in the mid-2000s. This audacious move, chronicled in the book and film //[[The Big Short]]//, netted the fund and its investors hundreds of millions in profit while the global financial system teetered on the brink of collapse. The fund was ultimately closed in 2008, with Burry returning capital to his investors to focus on his personal investments. ===== The Bet of the Century ===== Scion's fame rests almost entirely on its monumental bet against the U.S. housing market, a move so bold and prescient it’s often called one of the greatest trades in history. ==== Identifying the Bubble ==== While the world celebrated a seemingly endless housing boom, Michael Burry was doing something few others were: reading the fine print. He painstakingly analyzed the prospectuses of thousands of individual mortgages bundled into complex bonds called [[collateralized debt obligations (CDOs)]]. He discovered that these bonds, often rated as safe as government debt, were packed with incredibly risky "subprime" loans. These loans featured low "teaser" interest rates that would reset much higher after a few years, a ticking time bomb for homeowners with poor credit. Burry realized that when these rates reset, millions would default, causing the value of these supposedly "safe" CDOs to plummet. ==== The Weapon of Choice: Credit Default Swaps ==== How do you bet against an entire housing market? You can't just short-sell millions of houses. Burry found his answer in an obscure financial instrument: the [[credit default swap (CDS)]]. A CDS is essentially an insurance policy. The buyer pays regular premiums, and the seller agrees to pay out if a specific asset (in this case, the CDO bonds) defaults or "fails." Burry approached several major investment banks and persuaded them to sell him CDS contracts on the specific subprime-filled CDO tranches he believed were most likely to fail. In essence, he was buying fire insurance on a house he was convinced was about to burn down. The banks, believing the housing market was invincible, were more than happy to collect what they saw as free money from his insurance premiums. ==== The Agony and the Ecstasy ==== Burry's thesis was correct, but his timing was early. For nearly two years, the housing market continued to climb, and Scion Capital had to pay millions of dollars in monthly CDS premiums. The fund's value dropped, his investors panicked and demanded their money back, and he faced constant pressure and potential [[margin call]]s from the banks. It took immense psychological fortitude to hold the position. But then, in 2007, the first cracks appeared. Homeowners began defaulting as their mortgage rates reset. The dominoes started to fall, and the value of the CDOs cratered. Scion's CDS contracts, which had been a massive drain, suddenly became spectacularly valuable. By the time Burry closed the positions, Scion Capital had realized a profit of over $700 million for its investors and $100 million for himself personally—a return of over 489% in just a few years. ===== The Scion Philosophy: Value Investing on Steroids ===== At its core, Scion's strategy was an extreme form of value and [[contrarian investing]]. While traditional value investors look for undervalued companies, Burry looked for deep, systemic mispricings in opaque corners of the market that everyone else either misunderstood or ignored. His approach was a masterclass in betting against the herd. He didn't just disagree with the consensus; he built an incredibly detailed, data-driven case for why the consensus was disastrously wrong. This required not only brilliant analysis but also the stomach to be branded a fool while waiting for reality to catch up with his research. ===== Lessons for the Everyday Investor ===== The epic tale of Scion Capital offers timeless wisdom for any investor: * **Do Your Own Homework:** Burry's legendary trade was born from his willingness to do the boring, arduous work of reading thousands of pages of legal and financial documents. His greatest advantage was not genius, but diligence. Never invest in something you don't truly understand. * **Have the Courage of Your Convictions:** Being a successful contrarian means being prepared to look wrong, sometimes for a long time. If your research is sound, you must have the emotional discipline to stick with your position, even when the market and your peers are telling you you're crazy. * **Seek Out Asymmetric Bets:** The "Big Short" was a perfect [[asymmetric bet]]. The downside was known and limited (the CDS premiums he had to pay). The potential upside, however, was astronomical. Look for opportunities where the potential reward vastly outweighs the potential risk. * **Beware of Complexity:** The 2008 financial crisis was fueled by complex, layered instruments like CDOs that hid the underlying risk. For the average investor, the lesson is clear: if an investment seems too complicated to understand, it's probably too complicated to own.