Speculative growth
Growth-tilted with low quality scores — the high-risk corner of the style box (value 22/100, quality 22/100 vs peers).
Michael Burry is the investor who famously shorted the 2008 subprime-mortgage bubble — the trade dramatized in 'The Big Short.' He runs Scion Asset Management with a contrarian, high-conviction style, and this book is the proof: extreme concentration, a high risk appetite, and bets the rest of the cohort won't touch.
Growth Value
Low High
Diversified Focused
Long-term Active
Speculative Profitable
With Crowd Against Crowd
Each axis is a percentile rank from 0 to 100 relative to the profiled guru cohort; 50 is the cohort midpoint. The higher the value, the stronger the trait. The dashed overlay is the median shape of the guru's behavioral peer group, so you can read where this investor is unusual within their own style. The Trajectory arrows trace the drift from four quarters ago to now — an illustration of the method over a short window, not a statistical claim.
Beyond the radar's six: two further behavioral reads — whether new buys add to existing holdings or start fresh, and the size of companies the book favors — on the same 0–100 cohort-percentile scale.
New bets Adds to conviction
Small-cap Large-cap
Managers with assets above $100M disclose positions in Form 13F-HR within 45 days after quarter end. The backtest runs three $100,000 portfolios: the guru rebalances at quarter-end prices, the copier mirrors the same weights on the actual filing date, and S&P 500 is the benchmark.
The hatched area is the cost of delay: the difference in cumulative returns between the guru and the copier in percentage points. The delay is not always a disadvantage — if a stock fell between quarter end and the filing date, the copier buys in cheaper.
The guru curve is also a model: 13F shows only long positions in US equities at quarter end, without intra-quarter trades, shorts, or cash. Commissions, slippage, and taxes are not accounted for.
Growth-tilted with low quality scores — the high-risk corner of the style box (value 22/100, quality 22/100 vs peers).
Value tilt moved 75→22 this quarter — 54 points off the book's multi-quarter identity.
+66.7pp in PLTR this quarter — the book's largest single weight change.
A concentrated book that still trades heavily — big convictions held with a quick trigger (concentration 94/100, turnover 99/100 vs peers).
Concentrated positions in names the cohort largely avoids — high-conviction contrarianism (concentration 94/100, contrarian 95/100 vs peers).
| Ticker | Company | Δ for quarter | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| PLTR | Palantir Technologies Inc. | +66,7 | 66,7% |
| NVDA | NVIDIA Corporation | +13,6 | 13,6% |
| PFE | Pfizer Inc. | +11,2 | 11,2% |
| HAL | Halliburton Company | +4,5 | 4,5% |
| MOH | Molina Healthcare, Inc. | +1,7 | 1,7% |
| LULU | Lululemon Athletica Inc. | −17,2 | 1,3% |
| SLM | SLM Corporation | +1,0 | 1,0% |