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Muddy Waters Founder Goes Short: If AI Continues to Replace White-Collar Workers, US Stock 401K System May Collapse
Famous short-selling firm Muddy Waters founder Carson Block warns that artificial intelligence is fundamentally changing his market outlook, shifting his overall view from bullish to bearish. He predicts that within the next three years, 15% of knowledge workers in the U.S. will lose their jobs, potentially triggering a systemic shock to the stock market due to rising unemployment.
According to Bloomberg on Thursday, Block stated at the Future Proof Wealth Management Conference in Miami Beach that just a month ago, he was fully optimistic about the S&P 500 and the overall economy, but now his perspective has “done a 180.” This sudden turnaround came quite unexpectedly—last November, he publicly expressed a preference for going long rather than short on the U.S. market and disclosed several unconventional long positions.
Block’s main concern is that AI-driven employment disruptions will transmit through the labor market into financial markets. Once unemployment rises and reduces inflows into retirement accounts like 401(k)s, or even forces unemployed workers to dip into their savings early, the stock market could face sustained capital outflows, leaving “no one to catch this falling knife.”
Legal, accounting, and financial support jobs are the first to be affected
Block expects that AI-driven job displacement will initially impact fields such as law, accounting, tax consulting, and financial support, especially targeting entry-level and administrative roles. In the hedge fund industry, he believes many operational and back-office functions, including IT jobs, could be replaced by cheaper, more efficient automation systems.
He notes that profitable large institutions may still continue hiring junior analysts out of habit, but companies with thinner profit margins will quickly shift toward automation. This divergence means that employment pressures will first manifest in small and medium-sized enterprises and low-margin industries.
Block’s view aligns with current market anxieties—investors are increasingly worried whether the hundreds of billions of dollars invested in AI infrastructure will generate sufficient returns or merely accelerate corporate disruption and large-scale white-collar job losses.
Shorting credit spreads and seeking convexity opportunities
Despite his overall bearish stance, Block says his team is actively seeking structural opportunities in the market. Currently, Muddy Waters has positioned itself to bet on widening credit spreads and is trying to profit from liquidity mismatches in some exchange-traded funds.
“I think credit spreads are ridiculously tight right now, and credit volatility is ridiculously low,” he said. “In my view, you need convexity, and there are many ways to position yourself while controlling maximum losses.”
This strategy reflects Block’s belief that current market pricing is overly optimistic—investors, long accustomed to low interest rates, have become excessively tolerant of risk, enabling aggressive corporate behaviors.
Widespread gray areas but markets no longer care
Block also discussed the difficulties faced by his core short-selling business. He believes that years of loose monetary policy have not only inflated asset prices but also encouraged companies to adopt aggressive accounting and disclosure practices, creating a broad “gray area.”
However, market tolerance for such behavior is increasing. “My business is becoming harder and harder because unless something is extremely, extremely egregious, people just don’t care,” he said. This means that even with many companies potentially having issues, short-sellers find it difficult to garner enough market resonance and returns.
Risk warning and disclaimer
Market risks are present; invest cautiously. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and does not consider individual users’ specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions herein are suitable for their particular circumstances. Invest at your own risk.