Quick Read
-
Burry bought December 2028 LEAP call options on Microsoft with a $700 strike price, betting shares will nearly double from their current $360 range.
-
Burry’s actual position size is unknown since Scion Asset Management stopped filing 13F reports, so the bet could be small or massive.
-
LEAP options can lose 100% of their value, making direct Microsoft stock ownership a safer way for retail investors to share Burry’s bullish thesis.
-
Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Microsoft didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.
Artificial intelligence has turned the stock market into a contest over who will own the infrastructure powering the next decade of computing. Investors have poured hundreds of billions of dollars into AI leaders, pushing many technology stocks to lofty valuations. Yet even after Microsoft‘s (NASDAQ:MSFT) stock climbed over the past several years, it’s fallen hard over the past eight months, falling almost 33%.
One of Wall Street’s best-known contrarian investors believes the market is missing the bigger picture. Michael Burry, whose successful bets against the housing bubble were chronicled in The Big Short, has revealed a new long-term wager that suggests he sees Microsoft’s AI opportunity extending well beyond today’s expectations.
Burry’s Leveraged Bet on Microsoft’s Future
Rather than purchasing Microsoft shares outright, Burry disclosed that he bought December 2028 LEAP call options with strike prices around $700.
LEAPs — Long-Term Equity AnticiPation Securities — are simply long-dated options. In this case, they give Burry the right to purchase 100 Microsoft shares per contract at $700 any time before the options expire in December 2028. The strike price stands far above Microsoft’s recent trading range of roughly $350 to $373, making the options deeply out of the money today.
Here’s what the bet tells investors:
Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Microsoft didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.
|
Trade Detail |
What It Means |
|
Expiration |
December 2028 |
|
Strike price |
Approximately $700 |
|
Current MSFT price |
About $350-$373 |
|
Investment thesis |
Microsoft could rise well above $700 before expiration |
|
Maximum loss |
Limited to the premium paid |
|
Potential upside |
Large if Microsoft delivers another multi-year rally |
The options don’t become profitable simply because Microsoft reaches $700. Burry must also recover the premium he paid, meaning his breakeven price is roughly the strike plus that premium. If Microsoft finishes below that level, the options could expire worthless.

