SAN JOSE, California, May 27, 2026, 09:05 PDT
Super Micro Computer’s shares held near $37 in early Wednesday trading after a 4.3% gain on Tuesday, as a Micron-led rally in AI hardware pulled investors back toward server makers. The stock was little changed at about $37.15 in morning trade after closing at $37.10 a day earlier.
The move matters because it was not driven by a fresh Super Micro filing. It came as traders treated Micron Technology’s surge, sparked by a UBS price-target hike, as a broader signal that demand for AI infrastructure — chips, memory, servers, networking and cooling — may still be running ahead of supply. TradingView’s StockStory note said Super Micro rose with other “picks-and-shovels” AI hardware names, including AMD, Dell, HPE, Arista and Vertiv. TradingView
That leaves Super Micro at the center of a familiar split. The company is growing fast, but its economics remain tight. A company filing showed fiscal third-quarter net sales of $10.24 billion, up from $4.60 billion a year earlier, while gross margin — the share of sales left after product costs — was 9.9%. Net cash used in operations was $7.56 billion for the first nine months of the fiscal year.
Chief Executive Charles Liang has tried to move the story beyond boxes and boards. He said Super Micro’s “transformation into a total datacenter infrastructure provider is accelerating,” and the company guided for fiscal fourth-quarter sales of $11.0 billion to $12.5 billion and fiscal 2026 sales of $38.9 billion to $40.4 billion. Super Micro Computer
The caution case has hardened over the past two days. A Yahoo-syndicated Motley Fool article by David Jagielski noted that Super Micro’s latest sales rose 123% year over year, but argued that low margins, earlier accounting concerns and dependence on AI-fueled growth make the stock hard to own even at a seemingly cheap valuation.
Seeking Alpha contributor Tech Stock Pros also downgraded Super Micro to sell on Tuesday, saying the shares had risen about 60% since late March and that the margin recovery looked vulnerable. The note cited guidance implying sub-9% margins and said memory and CPU shortages could hurt near-term revenue recognition.
Management says demand is still there. Chief Financial Officer David Weigand said in prepared remarks that “orders and backlog remain strong,” with AI GPU-related platforms contributing more than 80% of revenue. He also said two customers each accounted for more than 10% of fiscal third-quarter revenue, including one large data-center customer at 27%. Q4 Capital
The peer comparison is not simple. AMD reported first-quarter revenue of $10.3 billion, close to Super Micro’s quarterly sales, but AMD’s gross margin was 53% and its net income was $1.4 billion. That gap helps explain why a chip designer can carry a far richer market value than a company assembling and shipping lower-margin AI server systems.
The broader market signal came from Micron. Reuters reported that UBS raised its Micron target to $1,625 from $535, citing stronger AI demand and long-term supply deals, and said those agreements could reduce earnings volatility in DRAM and NAND, memory chips used to process and store data. UBS also said there was “no reason” Micron should trade much differently from Nvidia on a price-to-earnings basis if AI demand keeps reshaping the sector. Reuters
But the setup cuts both ways. Super Micro warned that larger customers can make sales less predictable, pressure margins and increase customer concentration; it also said an independent board review tied to export-control issues could affect forecasts or past results. In March, Gabelli Funds portfolio manager Hendi Susanto told Reuters investors may weigh risks including “further investigation, audits, costs, negative reputation,” and customers avoiding scrutiny. Super Micro Computer
Super Micro has said it was not named as a defendant in the export-control case, and Reuters reported that Weigand told investors there had been “no change in allocations” from vendors including Nvidia, AMD and Intel. The company also said it had started an independent investigation. Reuters
For now, the stock is trading on two clocks. One tracks the AI buildout, where memory shortages and rising cloud spending can lift every hardware supplier in the chain. The other tracks cash, margins and customer concentration. Super Micro needs both clocks to run its way.