After the /r/superstonk post was made, Michael Burry (of Big Short fame) re-activated his Twitter account to post a farewell to a friend of his. He then re-post a post by his deceased friend.
The post that he tweeted came from the same forum from around the same time period as the post that was highlighted in /r/superstonk. People in /r/superstonk believe that Burry was (using plausible deniability) letting the people of superstonk know they were on the right track with the naked shorting algorithms that the Hedge Funds and Institutional Banks were using to take down weaker companies.
Which the logic makes sense because he re-activated his account specifically after that post on /r/superstonk made it to the front page of reddit, then used a post of his friend from 2004 on the same forum that the cellar-boxing information was on in 2005, and just so happened to do it after the post made it to the front page of reddit.
I was being a bit tongue and cheek.
However, this showed up on reddit today (technically last night): https://archive.ph/A1pgr
The actual post from /r/superstonk: https://archive.ph/xxRjw
After the /r/superstonk post was made, Michael Burry (of Big Short fame) re-activated his Twitter account to post a farewell to a friend of his. He then re-post a post by his deceased friend.
The post that he tweeted came from the same forum from around the same time period as the post that was highlighted in /r/superstonk. People in /r/superstonk believe that Burry was (using plausible deniability) letting the people of superstonk know they were on the right track with the naked shorting algorithms that the Hedge Funds and Institutional Banks were using to take down weaker companies.
Which the logic makes sense because he re-activated his account specifically after that post on /r/superstonk made it to the front page of reddit, then used a post of his friend from 2004 on the same forum that the cellar-boxing information was on in 2005, and just so happened to do it after the post made it to the front page of reddit.
why doesn't he own GME these days then