Key Takeaways
- A securities fraud class action has been filed against Super Micro Computer (SMCI) in federal court in San Francisco
- Plaintiffs allege the company concealed significant server sales to Chinese entities in breach of U.S. export restrictions
- Shares of SMCI plunged 33% on March 20 following DOJ criminal indictments targeting co-founder Yih-Shyan Liaw and associates
- The indictment details an alleged scheme involving Nvidia-based servers generating approximately $2.5 billion in revenue during 2024-2025
- Wall Street analysts have reduced their price projections, with the Street consensus settling at “Hold” and a mean target of $31.70
Super Micro Computer is facing mounting legal and financial pressure after a tumultuous week that saw its stock crater.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
On Wednesday, investors launched a class action complaint in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, alleging the AI server manufacturer engaged in securities fraud by concealing the true nature of its revenue streams. According to the filing, Super Micro deliberately obscured the fact that substantial portions of its server business involved transactions with Chinese firms in contravention of American export control regulations.
The legal action names both CEO Charles Liang and CFO David Weigand as individual defendants along with the corporation.
The class period covers purchasers of SMCI stock from April 30, 2024, through March 19, 2026, with plaintiffs pursuing undisclosed monetary relief.
The lawsuit arrives on the heels of a catastrophic trading session on March 20, when SMCI shares collapsed 33% after the Justice Department unveiled criminal smuggling indictments against company co-founder and board member Yih-Shyan Liaw, Taiwan-based sales manager Ruei-Tsang Chang, and external contractor Ting-Wei Sun.
Federal prosecutors allege that Liaw and Chang orchestrated a scheme utilizing a shell company based in Southeast Asia to circumvent export controls and funnel Nvidia-equipped servers to blacklisted Chinese purchasers. The operation allegedly produced $2.5 billion in server revenue throughout 2024 and 2025.
Super Micro as a corporate entity has not been charged in the criminal case. A company spokesperson stated that Super Micro has been “fully cooperating” with federal investigators.
Nonetheless, the civil lawsuit proceeds with allegations that SMCI inflated its business projections and intentionally hid critical deficiencies in its export compliance framework.
Wall Street Slashes Forecasts
The scandal has triggered a wave of downgrades and target reductions from equity analysts.
Kevin Cassidy of Rosenblatt Securities lowered his price objective to $32 from a previous $50, though he maintained his Buy recommendation. Cassidy characterized the controversy as casting “a dark cloud” over an otherwise promising product cycle. While he believes SMCI’s order pipeline remains healthy, he anticipates continued stock volatility until the probe concludes.
Bank of America analyst Ruplu Bhattacharya adopted a harsher stance, slashing his target to $24 from $34 while reiterating his Sell rating. Bhattacharya highlighted several headwinds, including potential supply chain disruptions from vendors, customer order freezes, and competitive losses to industry peers.
Current Analyst Consensus
The Street consensus for SMCI currently stands at Hold, derived from eight Hold recommendations, three Buy ratings, and three Sell ratings.
The mean analyst price target rests at $31.70, suggesting approximately 32% potential appreciation from present trading levels.
SMCI stock has declined roughly 18% year-to-date as March draws to a close.
