
Super Micro Computer Inc (SMCI) is extending gains after the AI server maker said it had actively collaborated with Taiwanese authorities to intercept an illegal smuggling operation.
In its press release, the company said it helped law enforcement arrest three suspects and seize 50 deceptively acquired servers destined for the restricted Chinese market.
A sale to an “authorized reseller” followed a vetting process that exceeded applicable government requirements, placing the blame squarely on downstream 3rd party actors, it added.
Including today’s gains, SMCI stock has more than doubled in just over two months.
Significance of the announcement for Supermicro stock
For months, Supermicro has been fighting a damaging perception problem: it’s a company with a systemic culture of export control negligence.
Back in March, a federal indictment named three individuals closely tied to SMCI, including a board member and a Taiwan-based sales manager, for allegedly conspiring to route Nvidia-powered AI servers to China without required US export licenses.
That indictment sent SMCI shares reeling and triggered a wave of securities class action lawsuits. But today’s announcement directly counters that narrative.
By proactively cooperating with Taiwanese authorities and publicizing the resulting arrests, SMCI is demonstrating that it’s now part of the solution – not the problem.
It’s a subtle but strategically important distinction that matters enormously to institutional investors, regulators, and, critically, to Nvidia, whose continued partnership is central to Supermicro’s entire business model.
What else makes SMCI shares worth buying in 2026
Beyond today’s compliance headline, the fundamental picture at Super Micro Computer is quietly strengthening.
In the latest reported quarter, SMCI posted $10.2 billion in sales, a sequential increase of 360 basis points in gross margin to 9.9%, and adjusted per-share earnings of $0.84 – up a staggering 171% versus last year.
Management guided for about $39 million in sales (at least) for the full year, reinforcing that SMCI remains strongly positioned to capitalize on the enormous AI infrastructure buildout still underway across hyperscalers and neocloud customers.
Plus, Supermicro shares are currently going for about 17x forward earnings, which makes it much cheaper to own than its arch-rival Dell Technologies.
How Wall Street recommends playing Supermicro
In conclusion, San Jose-headquartered Supermicro isn’t really a clean story yet.
The lawsuits remain live, the broader export control investigation is unresolved, and gross margins – while recovering – are still thin for a company operating in a rather competitive AI server market against Dell, HPE, and direct ODMs.
Yet, SMCI recently named Matthew Thauberger as its new chief revenue officer and Vik Malyala as its new chief business officer, reflecting a deliberate effort to “professionalize” and “diversify” its commercial operations.
And while the consensus rating on Supermicro stock sits at “hold” only, price targets go as high as $50 currently, indicating potential upside of another 20% from here.
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