Today: 19 May 2026
SMCI stock slips near $30 as Nvidia cools in year-end trade; what to watch

SMCI stock slips near $30 as Nvidia cools in year-end trade; what to watch

NEW YORK, December 29, 2025, 15:46 ET — Regular session

  • Super Micro Computer shares were down about 1.1% in late afternoon trading.
  • The stock tracked a pullback in AI-linked hardware as broader U.S. indexes eased.
  • Traders are focused on Supermicro’s delivery pace into the end of its December quarter.

Super Micro Computer shares fell about 1.1% to $30.29 in late afternoon trading on Monday, after swinging between $29.82 and $31.12 earlier in the session.

The move matters now because year-end positioning is thinning liquidity and magnifying day-to-day swings in high-volatility tech names.

Supermicro is treated as a proxy for spending on data-center builds, particularly systems that bundle advanced graphics chips into full server racks. With only a few sessions left in 2025, risk appetite has started to look more selective across AI suppliers.

U.S. stocks dipped in light, holiday-shortened trading, with the Nasdaq down 0.53% in afternoon trade. “In light volume trading, we’re seeing a reversal of what we saw over the last couple of days,” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. Reuters

Nvidia shares were down about 1.4%, and traders pointed to chip moves as a key input for AI-server names. A filing showed Nvidia completed a $5 billion investment in Intel that had been announced earlier this year, adding another headline to a sector that is already sensitive to shifts in sentiment.

Other data-center hardware names were also lower. Dell Technologies fell about 1.2% and Hewlett Packard Enterprise slipped about 0.8%.

Supermicro, based in San Jose, California, sells servers and storage equipment used in data centers. Investors often tie its outlook to demand for GPUs — graphics processing units — the chips widely used to train and run artificial intelligence models.

In November, the company said customer configuration changes pushed some large AI deliveries out, shifting about $1.5 billion in revenue from the September quarter into the December quarter. It forecast December-quarter revenue of $10 billion to $11 billion and raised its fiscal 2026 revenue forecast to $36 billion from $33 billion.

Those timing issues have become central to the stock because execution — sourcing components, testing systems, and shipping on schedule — can swing quarterly revenue and margins.

With the December quarter in its final days, investors are watching for signs that deferred shipments are converting into reported revenue and whether supply constraints on GPUs and cooling gear are easing.

Price action is also in focus. The stock’s dip below $30 intraday put it back around a level traders often treat as a psychological line, especially in thin year-end conditions.

For the rest of the session, attention is on whether chip-linked names stabilize and whether Supermicro holds near the day’s lows into the close. The next reset point for expectations is the company’s next earnings update, when investors will look for concrete color on December-quarter deliveries and profitability.

Stock Market Today

  • Polymarket Teams Up with Nasdaq Private Market to Settle Pre-IPO Event Contracts
    May 19, 2026, 1:43 PM EDT. Prediction market platform Polymarket has partnered with Nasdaq Private Market to enhance settlement of event contracts related to privately held companies, including IPO timing and valuation milestones. Nasdaq Private Market, a key provider of private market liquidity and investment infrastructure, will act as the resolution data source for these contracts. The collaboration launches new private company prediction markets on Polymarket, expanding beyond previous models relying solely on public information. This move targets a massive private market with nearly 1,600 unicorns valued at over $5 trillion, aiming to broaden access beyond institutional and high-net-worth investors. The partnership introduces more transparent and verifiable private company event markets prior to IPOs, democratizing private market engagement.

Latest articles

Top U.S. Stocks to Buy Today: 4 Names Wall Street Still Likes as Yields Bite

Top U.S. Stocks to Buy Today: 4 Names Wall Street Still Likes as Yields Bite

19 May 2026
U.S. stocks fell Tuesday as the 10-year Treasury yield reached its highest point since January 2025, pressuring growth shares. Nvidia drew the most attention ahead of its earnings, with options markets pricing in a possible $355 billion swing in value. Dell highlighted new AI infrastructure partnerships, while ServiceNow received a fresh Buy rating from Bank of America.
Nvidia’s Earnings Could Make or Break the AI Stock Trade

Nvidia’s Earnings Could Make or Break the AI Stock Trade

19 May 2026
Nvidia rose 0.8% ahead of its earnings report, while CoreWeave dropped 3.7% after Google and Blackstone announced a $5 billion U.S. AI cloud venture using Google’s custom TPUs. The new venture will offer 500 megawatts of data-center capacity by 2027. AMD and Micron also gained, but Microsoft and Broadcom slipped. Investors are watching whether Nvidia can maintain dominance as competition in AI inference intensifies.
Uranium Energy Shares Fall Close to 10% as Nuclear-Fuel Plays Get Hit

Uranium Energy Shares Fall Close to 10% as Nuclear-Fuel Plays Get Hit

19 May 2026
Uranium Energy Corp. shares dropped 9.6% to $11.93 in midday New York trading Tuesday, outpacing declines in other uranium stocks and the Global X Uranium ETF. UEC reported a $13.9 million net loss on $20.2 million in sales for its latest quarter, with 45,743 pounds of uranium concentrate produced at $44.14 per pound.
Synopsys stock today rises as tech slips, Dec. 30 lawsuit deadline nears
Previous Story

Synopsys stock today rises as tech slips, Dec. 30 lawsuit deadline nears

AMD stock today: Shares tick higher after hours as year-end tech selling weighs on chipmakers
Next Story

AMD stock today: Shares tick higher after hours as year-end tech selling weighs on chipmakers

Go toTop