Supermicro Stock Fell This Week as Avoiding Delisting Hasn’t Ended Volatility
Key Points
- Supermicro shares fell sharply this week, reversing some of the stock’s recent momentum.
- The company made a belated financial disclosure to the Securities and Exchange Commission this week, beating a deadline that could mean withdrawal from Nasdaq.
- So far, the stock has grown by about 35% so far in 2025, but is worth about half the value.
Supercomputer shares (SMCI) This week was lowered even when the company avoided using it on Tuesday.
Server manufacturers’ inventory surges before and after Business updates February 11, earlier this week Belated financial disclosure and Second. Supermicro says it’s restored Nasdaq requested, and said: “This matter is now closed.”
However, this has not ended the stock volatility. Friday closed at $42 after completing over $50 per share on Wednesday. The stock lost about a quarter of its value this week and has been lowered for the second consecutive day, and so far, the stock is still valued about 35% higher. Scaling further is that the company is worth about half what it was a year ago.
In the company’s second quarter update CEO Charles Liang said Supermicro’s revenue could grow 60% to $40 billion in 2026, driven by demand for data center infrastructure solutions.
Supermicro shares fell about 3.5% on Friday after falling 9% of their stocks on Friday.
This article has been updated to reflect the information on the closing stock.