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You know how it is with the perma-bears—they're always hunting for patterns in the chaos to justify their doom scenarios. Well, Michael Burry, the guy who literally called the 2008 crash in "The Big Short," just threw his hat into the bitcoin bear ring, and he's got people talking again.
Burry posted a chart comparison on X showing Bitcoin's recent drop from that October peak of $126K down to $70K, drawing parallels to the brutal 2021-22 collapse. The vibe he's going for? This thing could get way uglier before it finds a real bottom. Back then, BTC tanked from around $35K to below $20K—and if you map that percentage move onto today's price levels, you're looking at potential downside toward the low $50Ks. He didn't explicitly call a target, but the visual comparison was enough to reignite the whole "is history repeating itself" debate.
Here's where it gets interesting though. Not everyone's buying it. Trading firm GSR basically asked the obvious question: "Is it a pattern if it happened once?" And they've got a point. The 2021-22 wreck went down under completely different conditions—aggressive Fed tightening, crypto leverage imploding, retail getting wrecked. Today's market looks nothing like that. We've got spot Bitcoin ETFs, institutional money actually showing up, and the volatility is more tied to macro cross-asset stuff, equities, and AI spending fears than rate hikes.
That said, Burry's track record means people listen, even when they're skeptical. His whole approach isn't really about precise forecasts anyway—it's more about reading shifts in positioning and market psychology. Think of the chart less as a prediction and more as a heads-up about what failed rebounds and collapsing conviction could look like.
Bitcoin's been whipsawing hard this week, dipping below $71K before bouncing and then slipping again as risk appetite took a hit globally. So the timing of Burry's comparison definitely lands different when you're watching real-time volatility like that. Whether his Big Short instincts are calling it right this time or whether he's just shoehorning an old pattern into a fundamentally different market—that's the million-dollar question everyone's wrestling with right now.