NEW YORK, March 25, 2026, 07:55 EDT
Super Micro Computer climbed roughly 2.7% in premarket action Wednesday, building on its bounce from last week’s sharp drop as traders weighed new political attention on the AI server maker’s situation. Shares traded around $22.84 ahead of the open, up from Tuesday’s $22.23 close. MarketWatch
This shift is notable: SMCI remains roughly 28% under its March 19 closing level of $30.79, when prosecutors announced charges tied to an alleged $2.5 billion plot moving AI servers to China. Now, investors are parsing more than courtroom updates—they’re trying to gauge the risk of lost orders, stricter supplier controls, and whether the shares will keep trading at a steeper discount. Super Micro Computer
This week, Wall Street analysts kept paring back their numbers. Northland’s Nehal Chokshi dropped his rating to market perform from outperform, slashing his price target to $22 from $63, and flagged the risk of “flattish” growth down the line. Over at Citi, Asiya Merchant maintained her Neutral stance but clipped her target to $25 from $39, citing “reputation risk” tied to the allegations and arguing that shares deserve a valuation haircut until the company’s outlook firms up. MarketWatch
Super Micro isn’t listed as a defendant. In a March 20 filing, the company placed co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw and sales manager Ruei-Tsang Chang on administrative leave, cut ties with contractor Ting-Wei Sun, and tapped DeAnna Luna as acting chief compliance officer; later, Liaw stepped down from the board. The accusations focus on possible violations of U.S. export controls, rules designed to block advanced AI hardware from reaching China. Securities and Exchange Commission Reuters
New scrutiny surfaced late Tuesday, as Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jim Banks called on Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to probe comments made by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang regarding chip diversion—questioning if his statements misled U.S. authorities. Their letter specifically cited the Super Micro-linked incident. Reuters
It’s a tricky moment. Just last month, Super Micro bumped up its fiscal 2026 revenue forecast to at least $40 billion after posting $12.68 billion in sales for the quarter. “Order strength remains strong from large global data center and enterprise customers,” CFO David Weigand said. eMarketer analyst Gadjo Sevilla pointed to Super Micro’s growth being closely linked to its position as an integrator for big cloud and AI clients. Reuters
Analysts looking at customer moves to diversify tend to come back to Dell. Melius Research pointed out last week that Dell stands to benefit most, citing its size and stronger relationship with Nvidia. As Super Micro shares tanked, Dell stock jumped 6% that day. Reuters
But the risks are tough to ignore. Super Micro was already contending with squeezed margins from tariffs, pricier facilities, and parts shortages before any of this began. Gabelli’s Hendi Susanto flagged the obvious nerves: more probes, more audits, more expense, plus the damage to reputation, and a real chance that customers just back away to dodge the headache. Reuters Reuters
“Serious credibility issues that could impact business,” Bernstein’s Mark Newman warned after the episode. Despite the premarket rebound on Wednesday, shares remained down about 26% from their March 19 close, when the charges were still under wraps. Investing.com