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Super Micro Computer Stock Plunges. Is This a Buying Opportunity?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Supermicro's stock plunged after pre-announcing poor quarterly results.

  • The company continues to face intense margin pressure.

  • While the stock isn't expensive, it needs to find a better way to handle chip architecture transitions.

One of the most volatile stocks over the past year or so, Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) continued its habit of making big moves after its shares tumbled following the company's pre-announcement of poor fiscal Q3 earnings results. The stock has lost about two-thirds of its value over the past year.

The stock has been on a crazy roller-coaster ride ever since a short report came out questioning the company's accounting and accusing it of other misdeeds. The delay of its annual report, a reported investigation into the company by the Department of Justice, and the resignation of its auditor only added to the intrigue.

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However, the company is now current with its filings and reporting full results, but it just looks like they will be disappointing. Below, I'll take a closer look at Supermicro's announcement to see if this could be a buying opportunity in the stock.

Disappointing results

For those unfamiliar with Supermico, it's a hardware integrator that designs and assembles servers and rack solutions, which are fully configured systems that include networking, cooling, and power built in. It was one of the first companies in the space to offer direct liquid cooling (DLC) in its setups. Server hardware generates a lot of heat, especially when running artificial intelligence (AI) workloads, and DLC offers some nice advantages over traditional air cooling.

The company tends to build and customize its systems around Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs), and it's a key original equipment manufacturer (OEM) partner of the chipmaker. As such, it has benefited nicely from the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure buildout.

However, since the company is essentially a middleman integrator, its business has low gross margin. Despite the customization that it offers, it's in a commoditized field with low differentiation and intense competition. Meanwhile, it's passing on very expensive component costs, such as GPUs, that inflate revenue but don't add much to gross profit.

While Supermicro is in a notoriously slim gross margin business, it still has seen pressure on this front. This began showing up in its fiscal Q4 ending in June 2024 when its gross margin plunged from 17% a year ago to 11.3%. At the time, the company said that it had reduced prices in the pursuit of new design wins. For fiscal Q2, its adjusted gross margin remained strained, coming in at 11.9%.