NEW YORK, June 9, 2026, 19:03 EDT
Super Micro Computer said Tuesday it wants to raise $7 billion by selling equity and equity-linked securities, aiming to bankroll a spike in AI server orders. The stock dropped close to 9% in after-hours trading as investors worried about dilution and brushed off the company’s order backlog.
The timing of this financing raises questions. Demand isn’t the issue. The bigger question is just how much cash Super Micro needs ahead of shipping, and what percentage of the company current shareholders will hold after the new securities come out.
The company said the plan has $1.25 billion of common stock, $3.75 billion in depositary shares and an at-the-market program for up to $2 billion that won’t launch until at least the third quarter. Equity-linked financing points to securities that could later convert to common shares. The at-the-market program would let the company sell stock in the open market over time.
Super Micro fell 7.62% to $40.63 at the close, opening earlier at $44.88. Shares dropped ahead of the financing news. It was a soft session for other AI-related names too.
Stocks fell across the board. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 1% and the S&P 500 was down 0.3%. Marvell Technology and Advanced Micro Devices, both seen as AI winners, gave up their early gains, according to the Associated Press.
Dell Technologies dropped 4.8%, with rival AI-server maker Hewlett Packard Enterprise down 3.2%. Nvidia, with its chips key for AI, slipped 0.2%. The competitive backdrop remains hot.
Super Micro says it’s seeing strong demand. The company reported roughly $39 billion in fresh orders from over 20 customers for advanced AI servers, which are used in data centers for AI software. It plans to use the money raised to buy parts for these systems.
Super Micro’s capital raise comes after its May quarter numbers, which showed some expansion but also pressure. The company posted net sales of $10.2 billion for the fiscal third quarter, almost double the $4.6 billion from a year ago, though down from $12.7 billion in the previous quarter. Cash flow used in operations reached $6.6 billion. CEO Charles Liang said at the time that Super Micro’s “transformation into a total datacenter infrastructure provider is accelerating” and described the business as “robust.” Supermicro
But risks stand out. Super Micro says its $39 billion in AI orders aren’t locked in—they can be canceled, delayed or depend on terms being met. The company also listed in an SEC risk filing that a March indictment tied to former senior executive Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw and others damaged Super Micro’s reputation and could continue to drag on the stock. The filing also mentioned export-control probes and possible penalties. Supermicro
Wednesday’s focus is straightforward: investors have to decide if this deal means there’s real AI demand or if the AI server push is burning cash too quickly to repair margins. Where the new stock and preferred-linked paper price will drive sentiment.