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Super Micro Computer’s Roller-Coaster Ride Continues. What Should Investors Do With the Stock?

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Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) shares have continued to be extremely volatile, with the stock surging ahead of its preliminary earnings report, only to dip nearly 10% the session before its report. The stock then bounced around following the announcement of its result. The stock is up nearly 40% year to date, but down about 50% over the past year, as of this writing, as the stock continues to make big moves in both directions.

Let’s take a look at the company’s most recent preliminary results and guidance to help determine what investors should do with the stock.

2024 was a topsy-turvy year for Supermicro, as the company faced the backlash of a short report accusing it of accounting manipulation, a delay of filing its financials, a Department of Justice (DOJ) investigation reported by the Wall Street Journal, and the resignation of its auditor.

On its earnings call, the company said it is confident it will file its 2024 annual 10-K report and first- and second-quarter 10-Q reports by the Feb. 25 deadline. It added that its special committee found no evidence to support the reasons why its former auditor, Ernst & Young, resigned. However, it did confirm that both the DOJ and SEC were investigating it, subpoenaing the company for certain documents in late 2024.

For its fiscal Q2, meanwhile, the company said revenue will come in between $5.6 billion to $5.7 billion, representing year-over-year growth of 54% at the midpoint. That is well below the $5.95 billion revenue consensus, as compiled by Bloomberg. Adjusted earnings per share, meanwhile, are expected to range from $0.58 to $0.60, reflecting only 5% year-over-year growth due to margin pressures.

One area Supermicro was seeing pressure with before the short report and filing day was gross margins, which had fallen to 11.2% in fiscal Q4 from 17% a year ago and 15.5% in Q3 2024. Gross margins play a big role in how much revenue is converted into profits, so the higher the percentage, the better. Supermicro had a low-margin business to begin with, as top semiconductor companies like Nvidia and Broadcom have gross margins of around 75%.

For fiscal Q2 2025, the company sees gross margins coming in between a range of 11.8% to 11.9%. Meanwhile, it projected fiscal Q3 gross margins of about 12%.

The company was pressed on the call by Bank of America analyst Ruplu Bhattacharya, who asked if industry margins were under secular pressure due to more competition from other AI server manufacturers and whether direct liquid cooling has become commoditized with everyone now offering a version of it. The company said it hasn’t changed its margin target, and that being first to market with the very best solutions is an advantage.

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2025-02-17 09:14:00

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