‘Big Short’ capitalist Michael Burry states Meta ‘has a New Coke issue’
“Big Short” sage Michael Burry satirized Facebook moms and dad Meta’s distressed change towards the metaverse by contrasting it to Coca-Cola’s many well known error.
Meta manager Mark Zuckerberg has faced widespread skepticism as his business spends billions of bucks right into metaverse modern technology. At the same time, the Facebook moms and dad’s supply has actually stumbled this year amidst indicators the base of its individuals on its front runner social networks systems is diminishing.
“Seems Meta has a New Coke problem,” Burry tweeted on Saturday.
Burry referenced The Coca-Cola Company’s notorious decision in 1985 to ditch its traditional soft drink in favor of an updated recipe dubbed “New Coke.” The decision triggered an uproar so severe that Coca-Cola eventually went back to its old recipe. The company itself referred to the saga in a 2021 blog post as one of the “most memorable marketing blunders ever.”
Burry’s tweet suggests he views Meta’s decision to shift focus away from the social media platforms that fueled its dominance as a blunder of similar magnitude. He did not elaborate on the post.
The Post has reached out to Meta for comment on Burry’s tweet.
Burry’s Scion Asset Management held stock in Meta as recently as this year. In August, the hedge fund disclosed in SEC filings that he had sold off its long position on Zuckerberg’s firm during the second quarter, along with all of its other holdings.
At the time, Burry’s firm stake in the Facebook moms and dad was worth about $12.9 million.
Burry became famous after his bet against the US housing market ahead of the Great Recession was chronicled in the 2015 film “The Big Short.” The investor often speaks out on Twitter regarding his opinions on major companies, recently revealing that he felt he should be shorting shares of Tesla.
Meta’s Reality Labs, the division responsible for building the metaverse, reported a loss of more than $10 billion in fiscal 2021 alone as the company poured money into the project. The division has lost nearly $5.8 billion through the first half of this year.
The company’s initial forays into metaverse technology have been widely panned. The Wall Street Journal reported the company has slashed its user growth goals for its main metaverse platform, Horizon Worlds, with results falling short of expectations.
Still, Zuckerberg has remained adamant about the metaverse’s potential.
“The metaverse is a vision that spans many companies — the whole industry. You can think about it as the successor to the mobile internet,” the billionaire told The Verge earlier this year.
Meta’s supply is down more than 61% since January, easily outpacing a broad decline in the tech-heavy Nasdaq during the recent economic downturn. Zuckerberg’s personal fortune has actually declined by tens of billions of dollars during the stock slump — falling to $47.8 billion, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index.
Meanwhile, Meta recently enacted a hiring freeze and has actually apparently started conducting “quiet layoffs” as it wants to cut expenditures.