New York, June 11, 2026, 04:27 (EDT)
- Super Micro Computer dropped 28% Wednesday to close at $29.27. Shares slid after the company announced a $7 billion plan for equity and equity-linked funding.
- Super Micro Computer said the bulk of the cash will go toward buying parts for roughly $39 billion in new AI server orders from over 20 clients.
- Investors are looking at solid demand, but there’s concern the planned stock, depositary-share and at-the-market sales might dilute current shareholders.
Super Micro Computer shares plummeted 28% to $29.27 on Wednesday after news it plans to raise about $7 billion via equity and equity-linked financing. The San Jose server company reported $39 billion in recent AI-server orders, but the market focused on how it will pay for them.
Super Micro late June 9 said it would spend part of the cash to buy components for AI servers, including Data Center Building Block Solutions, to fill orders from more than 20 customers. AI servers need costly chips, memory, networking, and cooling before customers pay for the finished product.
Super Micro laid out a three-part plan. The company said it wants to raise $5 billion through underwritten public offerings, with about $1.25 billion coming from common stock and $3.75 billion from depositary shares. Each depositary share stands for a piece of mandatory convertible preferred stock, which will convert to common shares later. Super Micro also wants to set up an at-the-market program for as much as $2 billion. That program could let it sell stock gradually starting in the third quarter of 2026.
The stock fell even with a big backlog because of the structure. Common stock sales and securities that convert into common stock can dilute current shareholders. Each share then is a smaller part of the company. In its June 10 preliminary prospectus, Super Micro said it was offering $1.25 billion in common stock while also working on the depositary-share deal and a $2 billion ATM program.
Super Micro shares took a heavy hit. The company’s prospectus put its June 9 close at $40.64. By Wednesday, the stock finished at $29.27. With 601.4 million shares on the books as of March 31, that single day drop wiped out around $6.8 billion in market cap—almost the same as the planned financing amount.
The orders aren’t booked revenue. Super Micro warned that its $39 billion in AI orders “do not constitute firm commitments,” meaning they could still be canceled or delayed, and the deals hinge on both parties fulfilling terms. That’s a key point for investors, who are taking dilution now, while any earnings from those orders will depend on how the company executes in coming quarters. Super Micro Computer
Super Micro’s balance sheet showed the strain. Fiscal third-quarter net sales jumped to $10.2 billion from $4.6 billion a year ago, with net income at $483 million. But during the quarter the company burned through $6.6 billion in cash from operations. It ended March with just $1.3 billion in cash and $8.8 billion in bank debt and convertible notes.
The stock’s main tension is here. Super Micro is expanding quickly, but scaling up AI hardware uses a lot of cash. The company has to lock in parts and build up stock before it can turn demand into money coming in. Inventories hit $11.1 billion as of March 31, after sitting at $4.68 billion on June 30, 2025. Accounts receivable climbed to $8.41 billion from $2.20 billion over that same stretch.
Wall Street took notice of the demand. Wedbush’s Matt Bryson told Investor’s Business Daily the “incremental order momentum” is “positive,” but said the financing is “necessarily dilutive in nature.” Bryson left his neutral view and $34 price target unchanged on SMCI. Investors
Super Micro took a heavy hit Wednesday, falling 28%, after news of its $7 billion financing plan. Reuters called out the drop, noting it outpaced a wider slide in tech. The Nasdaq ended down 1.98% and chips dropped 3.6% as investors eased out of pricey tech stocks.
There are clear risks here. If customers pull back on orders, margins in Super Micro’s AI-server business fall short, or if parts costs go up before delivery, holders could end up with more shares out and lower earnings per share. The prospectus says controls on AI chip exports or imports could hit supply or sales. Super Micro also lists ongoing BIS probes, which could mean penalties or other fallout.
Bulls point to the size of the order book. Super Micro set a full-year fiscal 2026 sales target in May at $38.9 billion to $40.4 billion. The latest AI order haul is about the same as that full-year revenue guide. That settles any question about customer demand for AI servers. Now the issue is if Super Micro will have the capital, capacity and margins to deliver at this scale and still make the new share count work.
The next key event is when the company prices the common-stock and depositary-share offerings and sets final terms for the deals. That includes details on the dividend and the conversion terms for the mandatory convertible preferred stock. After those details, market focus will move to the planned ATM program, which management said won’t come before the third quarter. The company still has to show it can pull in $39 billion of orders as cash, and do it without eating into its upside by way of higher financing costs or too much dilution.