NEW YORK, June 10, 2026, 09:03 (EDT)
- Super Micro shares dropped in premarket trading after the company rolled out plans for a $7 billion equity and equity-linked deal.
- The company said the funds are for buying parts to fill about $39 billion in recent AI server orders with over 20 customers.
- There’s a trade-off here for investors: the financing might dilute current shareholders, and these orders aren’t binding deals.
Super Micro Computer shares dropped hard in premarket trading Wednesday. Investors shrugged off the company’s $39 billion AI server order number, turning their attention to Super Micro’s plan to raise $7 billion in new capital to support those sales. The stock was recently down around 11% from Tuesday’s close of $40.64. The San Jose-based group said it’s looking to raise the money through equity and equity-linked deals as it buys components for its advanced AI servers.
Super Micro’s latest move shakes up Tuesday’s plan with new financing. After the close, the company said it will do concurrent transactions worth around $7 billion. The money is meant for buying parts to build AI servers, which cloud firms and enterprises use to train and run AI.
Super Micro Computer announced a package with three pieces: about $1.25 billion in common stock, about $3.75 billion in depositary shares linked to mandatory convertible preferred stock, and as much as $2 billion from an at-the-market, or ATM, program, which would not start before the third quarter of 2026. An ATM allows a company to sell new shares gradually into the market instead of all at once.
The selloff comes down to how the new shares work. Issuing common stock means dilution for current holders. The mandatory convertible preferred is built to wind up as common shares too. Super Micro’s SEC filing shows every depositary share is one-twentieth of a preferred share, each with a $50 liquidation preference. These are set to convert into common stock by about June 1, 2029, unless converted before then.
Super Micro said it booked about $39 billion of orders for advanced AI servers in recent weeks, from more than 20 customers. The company pointed to its Data Center Building Block Solutions, preconfigured systems designed to speed up data-center deployments.
But investors are starting to make a clearer distinction between “orders” and real cash. Super Micro, in the prospectus, said the $39 billion of AI server orders “do not constitute firm commitments” and can still be canceled, delayed or face other conditions from either party. SEC
Super Micro’s latest numbers show why its capital raise is drawing attention. For its fiscal third quarter to March 31, the company posted $10.2 billion in net sales, net income of $483 million and a gross margin of 9.9%. Super Micro burned through $6.6 billion in cash from operations in the period. It finished March with cash and cash equivalents of $1.3 billion, while total bank debt and convertible notes sat at $8.8 billion.
Here’s the working-capital issue in simple terms. Super Micro has to pay upfront for pricey AI parts—chips, memory, networking, cooling—before it can send out its systems. When orders convert to revenue fast, financing speeds things up. But if deliveries get pushed back, the cash can get stuck in inventory and shareholders feel the dilution.
Super Micro shares slid 8% after hours following the news, Reuters said. Premarket moves on Wednesday signaled an even sharper fall as investors assessed the scale of the planned raise.
Wall Street’s big capital-markets desks are in the deal. J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup are lead joint bookrunning managers. Super Micro plans to list the depositary shares on Nasdaq Global Select Market with ticker SMCIP.
Super Micro is raising cash as demand for AI infrastructure stays strong and it tries to lock in parts with AI server orders still coming in. But there’s risk. Orders could be pushed out, dropped, or come in at worse margins—leaving the company with new equity at a low price and big working-capital needs. Super Micro has said that big customers make sales less steady and squeeze margins, and it flagged an independent board review over export-control issues.
What matters to investors now isn’t just the AI story. They’re waiting on final pricing and terms for the common and preferred offerings—details that spell out dilution for Super Micro shareholders and show if the company can tap its $39 billion backlog without raising more funds.