Scion Asset Management
In 2013, Burry reopened the Scion hedge fund under the name Scion Asset Management. Its aim was to generate personal investments, which include water, farmland, and gold.[4]
In August 2019, Scion disclosed major stakes in GameStop and Tailored Brands as well as two South Korean small cap companies where it would take an activist approach. Burry urged GameStop and Tailored Brands to buy back shares.[5] It is believed that Scion's acquisition of GameStop shares as well as its subsequent company share repurchase set the stage for the GameStop short squeeze. In late 2020, Scion sold its entire stake in GameStop. Scion missed out on the GameStop short squeeze which occurred only a few months later. Its 5.3% stake would have been worth over $1.5 billion at its height. However GameStop still traded over five times its original cost when Scion sold it leading to a profit of around $100 million.[6]
In May 2021, Scion disclosed it acquired put options on Tesla shares.[7] In November, Scion exited its position against Tesla. It also exited its positions for call options on Alphabet Inc and put options on ARK Innovation.[8]
From May 2020 to May 2023, traders following the investments disclosed by Scion would have made annualized returns of 56%. In the same period, S&P 500 had annualized returns of about 12%.[9]
In August 2023, it was reported Scion anticipated a stock market crash and acquired $1.6 billion worth of put options to bet against the ETFs that tracked the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq-100.[9] In November, Scion exited its position against the two ETFs. As they declined in the third quarter of the year by around 3%, it's believed Scion profited. Scion also was noted to have held a large put option against the iShares Semiconductor ETF.[10] By the end of 2023, Scion exited all its bearish positions and bought stocks related to healthcare, technology and financial services. It also increased its positions in Alibaba Group and JD.com making them its biggest holdings.[11]
In November 2024 it was reported Scion increased its holdings significantly in Alibaba Group, JD.com and Baidu. They were all hedged with put options to limit losses. While many investors were cautious about investing in China, Burry was one of the few China bulls along with Appaloosa Management’s David Tepper.[12]
In February 2025, China's stock market rallied $1.3 trillion after the emergence of DeepSeek. Although Scion had reduced some of its Chinese holdings before the end of 2024, they were still its top holdings.[13]
In May 2025, Scion disclosed it liquidated almost its entire listed equity portfolio in the first quarter, while acquiring put options on Nvidia and China-related stocks. This was done before US President Donald Trump launched a trade war.[14]
In November 2025, Scion disclosed it had bought more than $1 billion in put options to bet against Nvidia and Palantir Technologies. Scion also disclosed call options on Pfizer and Halliburton.[15] During the same month it was reported that Burry had announced the closure of Scion in a letter to investors, writing "My estimation of value in securities is not now, and has not been for some time, in sync with the markets." Scion was deregistered according to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission database.[16] Burry later clarified saying "Scion Asset Management is not closing as it is my vehicle for running other investment ventures, too. It is no longer an RIA, and no longer runs a fund for outside investors."[17]