SAN JOSE, California, April 22, 2026, 09:50 PDT
- Super Micro shares climbed in early trading, stretching out a sharp rebound that’s followed last month’s selloff.
- Fiscal third-quarter numbers land on May 5, putting investor focus squarely on demand trends, margin performance, and any lingering legal issues.
- Options desks are bracing for turbulence—traders want volatility, but they’re also snapping up downside protection.
Super Micro Computer shares climbed Wednesday, with traders setting up ahead of the company’s May 5 earnings—an event likely to show if robust AI-server demand overshadows ongoing legal and governance worries.
Shares climbed 2.7% to $29.20 early, putting the San Jose-based server maker’s market cap near $20.3 billion. Nvidia, Dell Technologies, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise were little changed or modestly higher, so the action stayed centered on the broader AI-infrastructure trade, not just Super Micro.
Timing is key here. Super Micro has slated its fiscal third-quarter results for release after the bell on May 5, with the earnings call set for 5 p.m. ET. This upcoming report will mark the first official update since March, when three individuals tied to the company were indicted—a development that’s brought renewed attention to export controls and compliance practices.
Options traders aren’t sitting still. According to TheFly via TipRanks, call activity in Super Micro outpaced puts, landing the put/call ratio at 0.53. Thirty-day implied volatility is running in the top 25% for the year. TheFly’s note also pointed out that options are currently pricing in a coin-flip probability—50%—of a swing greater than 10.99%, or $3.19, tied to the upcoming earnings.
Super Micro’s rebound comes on the heels of a difficult March. According to Yahoo Finance’s market coverage, shares climbed roughly 4.5% in the last week and are up around 38% for the month. Motley Fool pointed out that while the company’s AI exposure and Nvidia partnership continue to offer potential, ongoing legal issues, governance challenges, and shaken investor confidence still cast a shadow.
The AI data-center boom is still the backbone of Super Micro’s bullish outlook. Back in February, the company posted fiscal Q2 net sales of $12.7 billion—more than double the $5.7 billion reported a year ago—and projected at least $40 billion in net sales for fiscal 2026. “Scaling rapidly” to meet big AI and enterprise demand, CEO Charles Liang said at the time. Business Wire
Margins are where things get tricky. Super Micro’s gross margin slipped to 6.3% in the December quarter, down sharply from 11.8% a year ago, despite revenue more than doubling. Investors are eyeing May 5 not just for another topline jump, but for fresh guidance amid this blend of rapid sales and tighter profitability.
Wall Street’s patience is thin. JPMorgan slashed its price target on Super Micro to $28 from $40 last week, sticking with a Neutral rating. Still, analysts there pointed out that AI infrastructure spending—servers, switches, the whole hardware stack—remains a help for suppliers tied to the ongoing buildout.
Legal trouble keeps muscling its way into the AI narrative. A federal securities suit claims the company and a pair of executives hid risks related to server sales—prosecutors allege those servers ended up in China via an export-control evasion scheme. On Wednesday, a law firm notice flagged a May 26 cutoff for investors to file for lead-plaintiff in the case.
On March 19, the Justice Department announced charges against Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun, accusing them of conspiring to send U.S.-assembled AI servers to China in violation of export controls. Super Micro responded by placing two employees on administrative leave and cutting ties with the contractor, but said it was not a defendant in the case. Department of Justice
Super Micro has signaled investor support on standard governance issues. According to an April 20 SEC filing, shareholders gave a green light to an amended equity and incentive plan, re-elected Charles Liang, Tally Liu and Sherman Tuan as Class I directors, approved executive compensation in an advisory vote, and ratified BDO USA as auditor for fiscal 2026.
Right now, the stock sits in limbo—AI server demand pulling one way, worries about compliance, margins, and lawsuits pulling the other. The May 5 call probably won’t bridge that divide, but it does put a mark on the calendar: investors get to see if Super Micro’s orders and profit projections can outweigh legal uncertainties.