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Just caught something worth paying attention to. Michael Burry—yeah, the guy who called the 2008 collapse—is warning that bitcoin's recent weakness could trigger a cascading selloff in precious metals that might hit $1 billion.
Here's his argument: when crypto positions get underwater, institutional investors and corporate treasurers don't just sit tight. They start liquidating other holdings to cover losses. Burry points to the end-of-January dip in gold and silver as evidence that this is already happening. He's suggesting that tokenized metals futures got hit hard as traders rushed to de-risk.
The timing matters. Bitcoin dipped below $73K a few months back—a 40% slide from its peaks—and that's when Burry sees the real vulnerability showing. He's arguing that bitcoin never actually had solid foundations. No organic use case, no reason for it to hold value if momentum fades. If we see prices collapse toward $50K, mining companies could face serious trouble, and the whole tokenized metals market could implode.
What I find interesting about his take is how direct he is: bitcoin has failed as a safe haven. Corporate treasuries holding it? That's not a stable anchor. The whole institutional adoption narrative? Burry sees it as temporary—a side effect of spot ETF launches and speculative money, not real-world adoption.
Now, Burry's bearish calls spark plenty of debate in the community, but his track record is hard to ignore. When he warns about forced selling cascades, it's worth considering what happens if his scenario plays out. The question isn't just about bitcoin holders—it's about contagion across other asset classes.
Current bitcoin price is sitting around $72.76K, so we're in that danger zone he's flagging. Worth keeping an eye on how this develops.