TLDR
- SMCI rose ~3% to $22.23 Tuesday on volume 80% above average, attempting a rebound after last week’s 33% collapse
- Co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw resigned from the board after being federally indicted for allegedly smuggling NVIDIA AI servers to China
- Despite the legal chaos, SMCI beat earnings in Q4, reporting $0.69 EPS vs. $0.49 expected, with revenue up 123% year-over-year to $12.68 billion
- Multiple brokers including Citi and Bank of America cut price targets; consensus is now “Hold” with a $38.71 average target
- Securities fraud investigations have been opened by several law firms, adding litigation risk on top of regulatory pressure
Super Micro Computer has had one of the more turbulent weeks on Wall Street. After plunging more than 33% to a 52-week low last Friday, the stock clawed back around 3% on Tuesday, closing at $22.23. Volume was enormous — roughly 66.2 million shares traded, about 80% above the daily average.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
The selloff that preceded this bounce was triggered by a federal indictment targeting co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw. Prosecutors allege Liaw and two others used shell companies and fake equipment to smuggle NVIDIA AI servers to China, bypassing U.S. export controls.
Liaw has since resigned from the board. Super Micro placed certain employees on leave and named DeAnna Luna as acting chief compliance officer.
The legal trouble has spooked the analyst community. Citi, Bank of America, and Northland all cut their price targets. Goldman Sachs has a “sell” rating with a $27.00 target. The consensus across 17 analysts sits at “Hold” with an average target of $38.71.
U.S. senators including Elizabeth Warren have urged the Commerce Department to suspend export licenses tied to the case. National security concerns are front and center following the indictment.
Revenue Growth Still in the Picture
Despite the headlines, the company’s underlying numbers haven’t suddenly fallen apart. SMCI reported $0.69 EPS in its most recent quarter, beating the $0.49 consensus by 40 cents. Revenue came in at $12.68 billion, up 123% year-over-year and well ahead of the $10.34 billion estimate.
SMCI has also expanded its AI product lineup with NVIDIA-integrated systems, which some analysts still see as a near-term commercial tailwind. Rosenblatt Securities maintained a “Buy” with a $55.00 target, and Raymond James rates it “Outperform” despite cutting its target to $35.00.
Analyst and Market Pressure Mount
The risk picture has widened beyond just one indictment. Multiple law firms have launched securities fraud investigations and are soliciting shareholders, which opens the door to further litigation.
Analysts at Bernstein warned that any disruption to GPU supply from NVIDIA would materially damage SMCI’s operations. Susquehanna’s Mehdi Hosseini added that further leadership changes may be needed to restore confidence.
Technically, the stock is in rough shape. It’s trading 24.3% below its 20-day moving average and 30.5% below its 100-day. The RSI sits at 30.54 — just above oversold territory. Key support is at $19.50, with resistance at $30.50.
The stock is down 45.3% over the past 12 months, sitting much closer to its 52-week low of $19.48 than its high of $62.36. Premarket Wednesday, SMCI was up 2.47% at $22.78.







