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Here's Why I'm Staying Away from Super Micro Stock

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Super Micro Computer reported preliminary results that fell well short of expectations as customers delayed purchasing decisions.

  • The company also expects profits to dive as older inventory is written down.

  • With signs of an artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure slowdown building, Supermicro stock looks risky.

Artificial intelligence (AI) server manufacturer Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) regained compliance with the Nasdaq exchange earlier this year by filing its outstanding quarterly and annual financial reports. The company delayed filing its annual 10-K report last year due to issues with internal controls. This type of delay is never good news for investors, but Supermicro was able to remove a big cloud hanging over the stock.

Unfortunately, the company now has a new problem. Supermicro reported preliminary results for its fiscal third quarter on Tuesday, and the figures were a gut punch for investors. The company slashed its revenue outlook to a range of $4.5 billion to $4.6 billion, down from prior guidance of $5 billion to $6 billion. Adjusted earnings per share also got a haircut, with a new guidance range of $0.29 to $0.31, landing well below the previous range of $0.46 to $0.62.

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Customer delays and inventory write-downs

Supermicro didn't provide many details with its preliminary results, but it did say some customers delayed purchasing decisions in the third quarter. Those delays pushed sales back into the fourth quarter, leading to a revenue shortfall.

The company also disclosed that its gross margin would be about 220 basis points lower in the third quarter compared to the second quarter. The decline is driven by higher inventory reserves -- essentially writing off inventory that will either never sell or will sell at a big discount -- and costs related to expediting new products.

One silver lining is that Supermicro claims that design wins for newer products are robust. However, the company provided no hard numbers to back that up. Supermicro also didn't provide a date for its full third-quarter results.

The wheels could be coming off the AI infrastructure market

Generative AI has real use cases. The trillion-dollar question, though, is whether the technology has enough use cases, and can generate enough revenue or cost savings for businesses, to justify the massive AI data center investments being made around the world.

Earlier this year, Microsoft laid out a plan to spend $80 billion this year on AI data centers. The Stargate Project, a collaboration between OpenAI and other companies, intends to invest $500 billion over the next four years to build AI infrastructure. Other U.S. tech giants, including Amazon and Meta Platforms, are pouring tens of billions of dollars into AI data centers as well. The net result is an explosion of planned spending that would keep demand for AI accelerators and AI servers growing.