Super Micro Impacted By AI Server Delays And Nvidia Supply Limits, Analysts Lower Forecast

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Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) stock price dropped on Wednesday after the company reported worse-than-expected third-quarter financial results on Tuesday.

Wall Street analysts rerated the stock.

  • Needham analyst Quinn Bolton reinstated Super Micro Computer with a Buy and a $39 price target.

  • Wedbush analyst Matt Bryson reiterated Super Micro Computer with a Neutral rating and lowered his price target to $30 (from $40).

  • JP Morgan analyst Samik Chatterjee gave Super Micro Computer a neutral rating and a price target of $35 (down from $36).

Also Read: Super Micro Faces Cautious Analyst View Amid Shifting Customer Demand And Declining Margins

Needham: Super Micro posted third-quarter revenue of $4.6 billion, -19.0% Q/Q and +19.5% Y/Y, in line with the company’s preliminary announcement but well below previous guidance (midpoint at $5.5 billion). The weakness was due to customers waiting and evaluating next-gen AI platforms (Blackwell), which led to delayed commitments.

The quarterly adjusted gross margin came in at 9.7%, below the Street’s 10.1% estimate. Margins were negatively affected by higher inventory reserve charges on older Hopper systems, lower volume, and accelerated new-product costs.

The quarterly adjusted EPS was $0.31, which is in line with the preliminary announcement but well below the previous guidance (midpoint at $0.54). The miss was driven by lower revenue and margins.

The company guided fourth-quarter revenue to $6.0 billion at the midpoint, +30.4% Q/Q and +13.0% Y/Y, well below Bolton’s estimate of $7.0 billion and the Street’s estimate of $6.59 billion.

The quarterly adjusted EPS should come in at $0.45 at the midpoint, below Bolton’s prior estimate of $0.74 and the Street’s estimate of $0.64.

Super Micro has been at the forefront of liquid cooling technology, and the announcement of DLC-2 further solidifies its leadership.

Management highlighted product transitions from Hopper to Blackwell and tariff uncertainty as key contributors to near-term weakness.

Despite near-term headwinds, Bolton became incrementally more positive for the company as it filed its 2024 10-K and 2025 10-Qs and added to its management bench. The analyst found the valuation extremely attractive for a company targeting AI/HPC end markets and being at the forefront of liquid-cooled data centers.

Wedbush: Bryson noted that GB200 and B200 availability was limited early in the quarter, with initial parts primarily shipping to select Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) accounts.

This situation has been largely rectified, supporting a rebound in the next quarter. Super Micro is effectively guiding for a slight dip in gross margins on older products that it likely needs to discount to sell. The analyst noted OEMs were pushed to take Hopper, given B200 shortages.