SAN JOSE, California, May 11, 2026, 12:01 PM (PDT)
- Super Micro slipped roughly 2.2% around midday.
- May 26 is back on the radar for investors, with law notices highlighting the court deadline.
- AI server maker posts a robust outlook; still, questions linger around cash burn and ongoing export-control risks.
Shares of Super Micro Computer slipped Monday, with investors balancing a new batch of securities-class-action deadline alerts against last week’s upgraded profit forecast.
The stock dipped to $34.60, off 77 cents from its previous close, giving up earlier gains after touching $36.36 during the session. Roughly 28.2 million shares changed hands.
Legal deadlines are coming up fast. Glancy Prongay Wolke & Rotter put out word that investors who purchased Super Micro shares from February 2, 2024, through March 19, 2026, need to step up by May 26 if they want to be considered for lead plaintiff in the class-action suit—essentially the investor who takes point for the group in court.
Governance and export-control issues are still in focus, just days after Super Micro attempted to shift the conversation toward demand for AI servers—the high-performance machines behind training and running artificial-intelligence models.
Super Micro’s fiscal third-quarter net sales landed at $10.2 billion—an increase from $4.6 billion a year ago, though off from the $12.7 billion booked in the previous quarter. Gross margin moved up to 9.9%. The company is projecting fourth-quarter sales between $11.0 billion and $12.5 billion, with a full-year fiscal 2026 outlook of $38.9 billion to $40.4 billion. CEO Charles Liang pointed to an “accelerating” push into wider data-center infrastructure. Super Micro Computer
Shares moved higher in after-hours trading after results topped Wall Street’s forecasts, according to Reuters last week. Liang pointed to robust demand across data-center and cloud software, adding that factories in Taiwan, Malaysia, and the Netherlands were “ramping up aggressively.” On the call, Chief Financial Officer David Weigand noted there’s been “no change in allocations” from vendors such as Nvidia, AMD, and Intel. Reuters
JPMorgan’s Samik Chatterjee didn’t budge from his neutral stance on Super Micro, but did lift the price target to $32 from $28, according to Benzinga. The analyst pointed to improved customer diversification and stronger margins. Still, concerns lingered—Chatterjee flagged unresolved governance questions, potential capital requirements, and AI server pricing risks.
It was a mixed bag for peers during the session. Dell Technologies, a heavyweight in AI server sales, dropped roughly 4.7%. Hewlett Packard Enterprise edged down 1.5%. Nvidia added about 2.8%, its chips still driving the heart of the AI server surge.
The legal cloud traces back to an indictment in March. According to the U.S. Justice Department, Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun faced charges of conspiring to move U.S.-assembled servers packed with advanced AI tech into China, skirting export-control rules. Chang, the department noted, is still at large. Department of Justice
Back in March, Super Micro disclosed it hadn’t been named as a defendant. Liaw and Chang were put on administrative leave, while the company cut ties with Sun, who had been working as a contractor. It’s cooperating with the government’s probe, saying the alleged actions broke its internal policies and compliance rules.
The pitfalls here aren’t just in the courts. Super Micro burned through $6.6 billion of operating cash flow last quarter. On the books: $1.3 billion in cash, stacked up against $8.8 billion in bank debt and convertibles. Should parts run short again—or customers slow their rollouts, or suppliers tighten up—the growth targets could eat up fresh working capital long before cash flow settles down.
Here’s where things stand for Super Micro: AI infrastructure demand isn’t letting up, and management insists its vendor partnerships haven’t wobbled. But the market keeps circling back to a second, nagging question—beyond growth—about how much legal, cash flow, and control risk investors are prepared to accept as the AI server boom rolls on.