Michael Burry rang the alarm on consumer wealth in a since-deleted tweet on Tuesday.- "
The Big Short " investor noted households received huge amounts ofstimulus during the pandemic.
Michael Burry fears consumer wealth, boosted by vast amounts of cheap money during the pandemic, could falter in the face of raging
"This is the problem," Burry said in a now-deleted tweet on Tuesday. "Last 18 months - $850B in direct stim checks, $400B in cash out refis, $1+T in forgivable loans ($250-500B of it fraudulent), another $4 trillion indirect, etc."
"What recapitalizes the consumer now?" the investor of "The Big Short" fame continued. "Higher wages can't do THAT."
Burry's view is that US households took advantage of stimulus checks, cash-out refinancing offers, forgivable loans, and indirect economic support to grow their wealth over the past year and a half.
He's now worried that salary increases won't be enough to protect those savings and spare people from onerous debt. Consumers face a backdrop of surging inflation, rising
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Burry is best known for shorting the mid-2000s housing bubble, backing GameStop before it became a meme stock, betting against Elon Musk's Tesla and Cathie Wood's Ark Innovation fund last year, and repeatedly warning a historic market crash is on the horizon.