Famous short-seller Michael Burry, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), has bet against Apple this time, The Street writes.

During the first quarter, Burry, who is at the helm of hedge fund Scion Asset Management, which is known for predicting and profiting from the housing bubble and subprime mortgage crisis by betting against collateralized debt obligations in the mid-2000s, made short bets on Alphabet, Meta Platforms and Discovery.

As of March 31, Bjurri’s hedge fund owned bearish put options against 206,000 shares of Apple. While the Macbook and iPhone maker’s share price has nearly quadrupled since 2019, Apple’s stock is down 16% this quarter alone and 11.8% over the past month.

Meanwhile, by the end of December, hedge fund Scion owned just 6 shares and sold all of its shares except for Bristol-Myers Squibb.

The total value of Scion’s U.S. stock rose 122% to $165 million through purchases, not including options. As of March 31, the fund’s largest long positions were a $22 million stake in Bristol-Myers Squibb, about $19 million in Booking Holdings and Discovery, and an $18 million stake in Alphabet.

Burry invested in GameStop meme shares in 2019 and decided to bet against Katie Wood’s flagship Ark Innovation fund and Tesla in 2021. He said GameStop, Tesla, brokerage Robinhood and the booming housing market and cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and Dogecoin were showing signs that the market had become too speculative.

Last June, an investor warned that the market was experiencing “the greatest speculative bubble of all time,” and that retail investors who had put their money into popular meme stocks and cryptocurrencies were in for a huge crash.

By the third quarter of 2021, his stock was worth just $42 million, not counting options, as that he sold 14 shares and kept only 6. At the end of the fourth quarter, his stock was worth $74 million after exchanging 3 of 6 assets.

Bjurry warned in April that inflation would affect and depress corporate earnings. He believes the Federal Reserve raised interest rates to then boost asset prices after they fell instead of fighting inflation.

“The Fed is not going to fight inflation,” he wrote on Twitter. – “The Fed is reloading its ‘monetary bazooka’ so it can come to the rescue and fund fiscal measures.”