Ryan Cohen spent Sunday night (Could 3) saying a $55.5 billion bid for eBay. By Monday evening (Could 4), probably the most credible worth investor in GameStop’s nook had offered each share he owned.
Michael Burry didn’t depart quietly. He defined precisely why. And his phrases are price studying fastidiously.
What Burry stated about GameStop on Substack
“I offered my whole GME place,” Burry wrote in a Substack publish Monday night, in accordance with CNBC. “Any which means I sliced it, the Instantaneous Berkshire thesis was by no means suitable with greater than 5x Debt/EBITDA, by no means happy with curiosity protection underneath 4.0x.”
He closed with a line that can observe this deal for a very long time. “By no means confuse debt for creativity,” Burry wrote, CNBC confirmed.
Fund supervisor buys and sells
He additionally challenged the strategic logic immediately.
“Ryan can’t be after fats to chop, if solely as a result of no quantity of reduce fats makes this deal work,” he stated, in accordance with Sherwood Information.
The publish represents the primary time Burry has totally offered a place since launching his Substack.
What the “Instantaneous Berkshire” thesis was
To know why Burry’s exit issues, it’s important to perceive what he was initially shopping for. In January, Burry disclosed he was accumulating GameStop shares and explicitly in contrast Ryan Cohen’s capital allocation strategy to Warren Buffett’s early Berkshire Hathaway playbook, in accordance with MarketDash.
Affected person, opportunistic, and powered by a rising money pile moderately than borrowed cash.
Burry known as that thesis “Instantaneous Berkshire.” The concept was that Cohen would compound capital slowly, make disciplined acquisitions, and construct a sturdy enterprise with out stretching the steadiness sheet.
That was the model of GameStop Burry believed in. It’s not the model Cohen introduced Sunday evening.
A $55.5 billion supply for eBay from an organization with a market cap of roughly $12 billion just isn’t affected person capital allocation. It’s an aggressive leveraged guess. And Burry’s math on what that guess truly prices is blunt: at $125 per share, the deal would push leverage to roughly 7.7 occasions debt to EBITDA, a degree Burry described as “bordering on distressed,” in accordance with CNBC.
Why the leverage math troubles Burry
Burry’s framework just isn’t merely that he dislikes debt. It’s that he believes extremely leveraged corporations lose the factor that makes them aggressive. “The extra possible final result on the increased value sees leverage rise to 7.7x, a degree of debt that borders on distressed and tends to strip competitiveness and innovation from such-stricken corporations,” he wrote, in accordance with Stocktwits.
He cited Wayfair, Carvana, and Bathtub and Physique Works as cautionary examples of corporations that survived excessive leverage.
“These are the survivors. They’re few,” he wrote, Sherwood Information famous. Burry additionally stated he would have most well-liked GameStop to pursue Wayfair, which he described as a extra acceptable goal with last-mile supply infrastructure and money movement.
He additionally expects Cohen’s $125 bid to be simply the opening quantity. Burry believes eBay’s board will reject the preliminary supply and that the revised deal will contact $65 billion, in accordance with Stocktwits. That might pressure GameStop’s funds even additional than the present proposal.
Michael Burry constructed a place round one particular concept and watched it collapse in a single eveningBrandon Bell/Getty Pictures
How GameStop’s inventory reacted
GameStop shares fell roughly 10% on Could 4 following the eBay announcement, in accordance with CNBC. That’s GameStop’s largest intraday fall in 10 months, in accordance with Stocktwits. The market was not celebrating Cohen’s ambition. It was pricing within the threat that comes with an organization roughly one-fifth of eBay’s dimension making an attempt to soak up it.
Cohen addressed the financing skepticism in a CNBC interview Monday, saying GameStop has flexibility to problem fairness. Burry’s response to that framing, embedded in his Substack publish, was pointed. He described the capital markets strategy behind the bid as “pedestrian,” not inventive, Sherwood Information confirmed.
Key figures from Burry’s exit and the GameStop-eBay state of affairs:
Burry’s precise exit assertion: “I offered my whole GME place,” the primary full sale since his Substack launch, in accordance with CNBC
Burry’s leverage threshold: by no means suitable with greater than 5x Debt/EBITDA or curiosity protection underneath 4.0x, CNBC confirmed
Projected leverage at $125 per share deal: roughly 7.7x debt to EBITDA, bordering on distressed, in accordance with Stocktwits
Burry’s revised deal estimate: $65 billion if eBay’s board rejects the opening bid, Stocktwits famous
GameStop market cap at time of bid: roughly $12 billion, in accordance with Yahoo Finance
GameStop inventory decline on Monday: roughly 10%, its largest single-day drop in 10 months, Stocktwits confirmed
Burry’s most well-liked different goal: Wayfair, which he stated gives last-mile supply infrastructure and money movement with out the identical leverage threat, in accordance with Sherwood Information
What this implies for Ryan Cohen’s credibility
Burry was not only a shareholder. He was probably the most credible institutional voice within the bullish camp. His January thesis gave GameStop a legitimacy that separated it from the meme-stock narrative. A outstanding short-seller-turned-value-investor holding GameStop as a Berkshire-style compounding story was a narrative the market might inform with a straight face.
That story ended Monday evening. Burry’s exit doesn’t kill the eBay deal. But it surely does take away the mental scaffolding that made GameStop appear to be a price proposition moderately than a speculative car. Cohen now has to make the case for his bid with out the assist of the investor whose thesis most clearly legitimized his management.
The tougher drawback is what Burry’s framework reveals concerning the bid itself. If probably the most disciplined worth investor who believed in Cohen’s imaginative and prescient concluded that this particular deal crosses an uncrossable line on leverage, the query for remaining shareholders is whether or not they share that line or are prepared to observe Cohen previous it. The reply to that query will form how this story ends.
Associated: Michael Burry buys beaten-down mega tech inventory
This story was initially revealed by TheStreet on Could 5, 2026, the place it first appeared within the Investing part. Add TheStreet as a Most well-liked Supply by clicking right here.