Super Micro Computer (SMCI) stock opened at $33.46 on Friday, with a market cap of $20.12 billion. The stock surged more than 17% following its fiscal Q3 2026 earnings report — but the results were far from clean.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
Revenue came in at $10.24 billion for the quarter, up 122.7% year-over-year but well short of the $12.39 billion analysts expected. On the other hand, EPS landed at $0.84, beating the $0.63 consensus by about 33%.
The story of the quarter is really in the margins. Gross margin rebounded to 10.1%, up from a concerning 6.4% the quarter before. That recovery came largely from a shift in product mix — over 80% of revenue now comes from AI GPU systems, which carry better margins.
But the improvement may not last. Q4 guidance calls for EPS of $0.65–$0.79, and margins are expected to slip back to the 8.2%–8.4% range as cost pressures return.
The balance sheet is where things get uncomfortable. Operating cash flow collapsed to negative $6.6 billion. Inventory has ballooned to $11.1 billion, and net debt now sits at $7.5 billion.
Working capital demands are rising fast as the company scales to meet AI infrastructure orders. That kind of cash burn makes some investors nervous, even with the top-line growth story intact.
The company is guiding for long-term revenue growth from $40 billion toward $60 billion by FY2028, and management has flagged annualized output capacity targets above $100 billion. The forward P/E sits at roughly 12.9x — cheap by tech standards, but the discount reflects real risk.
Customer concentration has improved, dropping from 63% to 27%. Enterprise channel revenue grew 45% sequentially — one of the cleaner data points in the report.
SMCI’s legal backdrop is messy. A DOJ investigation remains active. Multiple securities class action lawsuits have lead-plaintiff deadlines clustering around May 25–26. A new suit from Hagens Berman alleges the company sold AI servers with export-restricted Nvidia chips to China through a shell entity in Southeast Asia.
Taiwanese authorities are also reportedly seeking detentions in a separate smuggling probe. These are not minor footnotes — they’re keeping a lid on the stock’s valuation despite the AI tailwinds.
On the leadership front, SMCI appointed Vik Malyala as Chief Business Officer on May 11 and named Matthew Thauberger as Chief Revenue Officer on May 14, following the retirement of longtime sales head Don Clegg.
Institutional ownership stands at 84%. North Dakota State Investment Board opened a new position in Q4, buying 17,620 shares valued at ~$516,000.
Analyst targets were revised after earnings: Northland boosted its target from $22 to $34, JPMorgan moved from $28 to $32 with a “neutral” rating, and Wedbush trimmed its target from $42 to $34, also neutral. The consensus price target is $38.43, with four Buy ratings, eleven Hold, and two Sell.
The post Super Micro Computer (SMCI) Stock Surges After Earnings — Is the Worst Over? appeared first on CoinCentral.