Michael Burry, the investor known for betting against the U.S. housing market ahead of the 2008 crisis, warned that a deeper slide in Bitcoin (BTC) could set off what he called “sickening scenarios,” including forced selling and failures at crypto-linked firms.
In a Feb. 2 post on his Substack, Burry laid out a set of downside thresholds — $70,000, $60,000, and $50,000 — that he argued could tighten financing conditions for big corporate holders and push weaker miners toward insolvency.
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Why Bitcoin at $70,000 Is the First Danger Line
Burry’s starting point is that price declines can become funding problems.
He said a move below roughly $70,000 could deepen paper losses for large corporate holders and make capital harder, or more expensive, to raise as investor confidence erodes.
Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), whose equity is closely tied to Bitcoin accumulation, is a central example in his framework.
The risk, in his telling, is less about accounting marks and more about access to financing.
If markets begin treating Bitcoin-heavy balance sheets as structurally fragile, the cost of capital rises and refinancing windows narrow — conditions that can force defensive behavior even from “long-term” holders.
At $60,000, Bitcoin’s Reflexive Selling Risk Rises
Burry framed the next level, around $60,000, as a more acute stress point for Bitcoin treasury strategies.
The risk, as he outlined it, is reflexive:
- Falling prices weaken balance sheets and market confidence,
- which tightens financing conditions,
- which can increase the probability of selling,
- which then pressures prices further.
Bloomberg described the dynamic as a potential “death spiral” for firms that spent the past year stockpiling bitcoin.
That’s the “what if” at the center of Burry’s warning: not that every corporate holder must sell, but that the market begins pricing in the chance of forced selling, and that expectation itself becomes destabilizing.
At $50,000, Bitcoin Miners Face Insolvency Pressure
Burry’s third threshold was $50,000, where he argued miners could be pushed into bankruptcy, potentially leading to additional selling pressure if distressed operators are forced to liquidate Bitcoin holdings or unwind positions to cover costs.
Mining is particularly sensitive to price because revenue is paid in the underlying asset, while costs are largely in fiat terms (energy, equipment, labor, financing).
When prices fall, weaker balance sheets can crack quickly, especially if leverage is involved or if hedges roll off.
Burry’s point was that a wave of miner failures could shift the market from orderly selling to disorderly selling.
Metals Spillover: Liquidation Mechanics, Not a Hedge Thesis
Burry also linked crypto stress to moves in precious metals, arguing that selling pressure tied to crypto losses may have contributed to end-of-month liquidation flows in metals-related products.
Bloomberg reported that Burry cited as much as $1 billion in precious metals being liquidated at month-end.
That’s a different claim than “Bitcoin trades like gold.” It’s a balance-sheet and risk-management claim.
When portfolios face pressure, they often sell what they can, not just what they want. Burry warned that forced selling can scramble correlations, at least temporarily.
Bottom line
Burry’s post is a warning about market structure under stress: corporate treasury concentration, miner fragility, and reflexive selloffs.
His thresholds are not predictions carved into stone. They are, in his framing, levels where funding, solvency, and forced-liquidation risks could rise sharply.




























































































































































































































