Today: 18 May 2026
Super Micro Shares Slip, Eyes on Monday for SMCI
18 May 2026
3 mins read

Super Micro Shares Slip, Eyes on Monday for SMCI

New York, May 17, 2026, 18:02 EDT

  • Super Micro Computer shares finished Friday at $31.04, dropping 6.0%. The stock has fallen about 12.2% since the close on May 8. The Nasdaq Composite shed 1.54%.
  • Nasdaq is closed Sunday. Regular trading picks back up Monday. U.S. market hours stay at 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern.
  • Supermicro is set to appear at a J.P. Morgan tech conference on Monday. After a volatile week, management has an opportunity to speak to demand, margin and legal issues.

Super Micro Computer shares stayed weak after sliding 6% Friday, capping a rough week for the AI-server name as investors balanced the company’s jump in revenue with narrow margins, big cash burn and lingering legal risks. The stock ended Friday at $31.04, off from $35.37 the week before.

Timing comes into play here. U.S. stock markets stayed shut Sunday, and Super Micro is set for a fireside chat Monday at the J.P. Morgan Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference in Boston. That’s the company’s next shot with investors before regular trading picks up again.

Super Micro is often seen as a way to trade the artificial intelligence infrastructure trend. The company makes servers for data centers—AI servers usually include GPUs, the chips that handle training and running AI models. After Super Micro’s May 5 results, Reuters said the company has gained from its speed at building custom, high-performance systems for data-center operators and AI startups.

Super Micro’s March-quarter results landed strong, giving bulls plenty to hang on to. Net sales hit $10.24 billion, up 122.7% year on year. Gross margin came in at 9.9%. Gross margin is the percentage of sales left after production costs. Most of the growth came from customer data-center orders, with a few big design wins highlighted in a regulatory filing.

Super Micro Computer posted a messy quarter. Revenue dropped from $12.7 billion last quarter, and Reuters reported the March-quarter number was under the $12.33 billion analysts expected. The company burned through $6.6 billion in operating cash, a steep outflow that looks set to draw more investor questions this week.

Management’s forecast lifted some pressure for now. Super Micro put out a fiscal fourth-quarter revenue range of $11.0 billion to $12.5 billion, with adjusted EPS at 65 to 79 cents. That measure takes out some costs to reflect what the company sees as true profit. Reuters said both the revenue and EPS ranges topped Wall Street estimates.

Charles Liang, who runs Super Micro as founder, president and CEO, said the company’s “transformation” to a full data-center infrastructure provider is “accelerating.” Liang also talked about “margin recovery” and growth in its Data Center Building Block Solutions unit, calling out its modular strategy for building data-center systems. Super Micro Computer

Wall Street is divided. Raymond James analyst Simon Leopold kept his Outperform rating on the stock and boosted his price target to $45 from $35 after earnings, according to Investing.com. Leopold called the quarter “mixed,” but pointed to a “sharp improvement in gross margin.” He also mentioned reputational risk from a legal case involving former people linked to the company. Investing.com

Legal issues are a clear risk here. In March, the U.S. Justice Department charged Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun with allegedly conspiring to send U.S.-built AI servers to China against export controls. Super Micro said it isn’t named as a defendant, has put two employees on leave, and has ended work with the contractor. Department of Justice

Reuters said in April that Super Micro started an independent probe and compliance check after the indictment. In its earnings statement, the company said the board’s review may alter forecasts, early numbers or past results, leaving the review hanging over the stock.

Dell Technologies and Hewlett Packard Enterprise are still part of the AI-server talk, but chipmakers Nvidia, AMD, and Intel play key roles since their chips run much of the AI hardware. The Philadelphia semiconductor index dropped 4% Friday, Reuters said. Nvidia slid 4.4%, AMD lost 5.7%, and Intel slipped 6.2%. The broader AI trade can turn fast.

Super Micro execs insisted supplier ties are solid. CFO David Weigand told the earnings call there was “no change in allocations” on chip supply from Nvidia, AMD and Intel, according to Reuters. Reuters

Broader market action isn’t helping. U.S. stocks dropped Friday, with crude and Treasury yields moving higher. The S&P 500 fell 1.24%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 1.54%. Kenny Polcari, chief market strategist at Slatestone Wealth, told Reuters the market “had gotten way ahead of itself” on the AI trade. Reuters

Investors head into the week watching for signs on three points: if delayed customer deployments are actually turning into revenue, if the gross margin stays near 10%, and if the board’s ongoing review brings new financial or customer risks. The company is set to report Monday. It may not answer everything, but with shares down 12% this week, even minor updates could swing the stock.

Stock Market Today

  • Clorox and Spectrum Brands Lead Q1 Earnings in Household Products Sector
    May 17, 2026, 6:31 PM EDT. Household products stocks showed resilience in Q1, with revenues beating analyst estimates by 2.7% overall. Clorox (NYSE:CLX) reported $1.67 billion in revenue, matching expectations but saw its shares drop 4.7% post-earnings. Spectrum Brands (NYSE:SPB) led the pack with a 4.9% revenue increase to $708.9 million, exceeding forecasts by 4.4%, yet its stock declined 6.6%. Despite strong earnings, both companies faced stock price declines amid investor caution. The sector reflects growing consumer demand for eco-friendly products, rewarding innovators. Clorox CEO Linda Rendle highlighted mixed results with uneven market share recovery. Overall, household product stocks declined 3.5% on average since earnings data, pointing to cautious market sentiment despite stable revenues.

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