New York, June 16, 2026, 05:02 ET
- Super Micro Computer finished Monday at $30.85, rising 1.28%. But the stock remains well under where it was before last week’s selloff.
- The most recent company move is the June 15 close of its 75 million depositary-share sale, linked to 7% mandatory convertible preferred stock.
- The focus now shifts to fiscal Q4: how the company delivers on revenue, margins, cash flow, and converts new AI orders into profitable shipments.
Super Micro Computer, Inc. bounced back a bit on Monday, with shares ending at $30.85, up $0.39 or 1.28%. The rise comes after a rough stretch for the Nasdaq name, hit hard by a big financing round for new AI-server demand. The Nasdaq Composite gained 3.1% on the day as tech led. Last week, SMCI shares tumbled after the company priced new stock and preferreds to get cash for a rush of AI server orders. Yahoo Finance
Super Micro closed its depositary-share offering on June 15, according to the latest filing. The company sold 75 million depositary shares, with each share tied to a 1/20 interest in its 7.00% Series A Mandatory Convertible Preferred Stock. This type of preferred stock pays out a set dividend but will convert into common stock, raising the total share count. Underwriters can still take a 30-day option for up to 11.25 million more depositary shares. SEC
Super Micro shares dropped earlier because investors worried about dilution. That happens when new shares or convertible securities hit the market and cut down existing shareholders’ percentage. Super Micro set the price for 45,454,545 common shares at $27.50 and 75 million depositary shares at $50. The company expects to collect about $1.22 billion from the common stock side, and $3.68 billion from depositary shares. Super Micro plans to use those funds, plus cash from a future at-the-market stock sale, to buy components tied to around $39 billion of new AI-server orders for over 20 customers. Supermicro
The argument from bulls is that Super Micro is going out to raise money because demand is running hot, not because sales are softening. Super Micro reported fiscal Q3 net sales at $10.2 billion, up from $4.6 billion a year ago. Gross margin moved higher too, hitting 9.9% compared to 6.3% in the prior quarter. The company put out guidance for fiscal Q4 revenue between $11.0 billion and $12.5 billion, and is targeting full-year fiscal 2026 revenue of $38.9 billion to $40.4 billion. Gross margin is what’s left after direct production costs. It matters for Super Micro, since AI-server hardware sales can climb but profits can stay lean if parts costs or pricing take a hit. Supermicro
Super Micro’s growth story comes with big financing demands. The company used $6.6 billion of cash flow in operations in fiscal Q3, leaving it with $1.3 billion in cash. Total bank debt and convertible notes hit $8.8 billion at March 31. Super Micro warned its $39 billion of AI orders could be canceled or delayed, and said its board is now running an independent review into transactions tied to export-control issues. Supermicro
SMCI doesn’t look clearly cheap at current levels. The stock trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 14.8. That’s a modest multiple for an AI infrastructure name, but it doesn’t solve the main worries for investors — future dilution, preferred dividends, working-capital pressures, risk around order conversion, and whether margins can hold above 10%. The next big test comes with Super Micro’s fiscal Q4, which wraps up June 30, 2026. That report is when investors will want to see if the AI backlog is showing up as revenue, cash flow, and earnings — and if it can happen without fresh dilution. Supermicro