Key Takeaways
- Mizuho Securities reduced SMCI’s price target to $25 from $33 while maintaining a “Neutral” stance
- Shares currently trade at $23.22, falling short of both Mizuho’s revised target and InvestingPro’s $32.45 fair value assessment
- Co-founder entered a not guilty plea to allegations of unlawfully shipping Nvidia-based servers to China
- Several Wall Street analysts have reduced forecasts; consensus rating remains “Hold” with a $36.50 average target
- Company delivered impressive 123.4% year-over-year revenue expansion last quarter, though legal and regulatory challenges overshadow fundamentals
Mizuho Securities slashed its outlook on Super Micro Computer (SMCI) to $25 per share from $33 on Monday, maintaining its “Neutral” stance. The downgrade reflects mounting concerns over regulatory investigations, geopolitical trade tensions, and rising competitive threats.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
Shares opened Monday trading at $23.22, falling below Mizuho’s newly established target and significantly under InvestingPro’s calculated fair value of $32.45.
While Mizuho maintains optimism about AI server demand through 2026 and 2027, citing Nvidia’s data center revenue trajectory showing over 50% annual growth into 2027, the firm acknowledges significant headwinds. Cloud infrastructure spending is projected to reach $689 billion in 2026, representing a 64% year-over-year surge.
However, Mizuho warned that emerging China-related trade complications could redirect business toward Dell. The analysis highlighted Dell’s substantially larger AI services organization—10 times the size—and an approximately $85 billion opportunity pipeline.
Notably, Mizuho simultaneously elevated Dell’s price objective to $215 while reducing SMCI’s forecast.
Regulatory Investigation Compounds Challenges
Intensifying the company’s difficulties, co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw entered a not guilty plea to federal charges alleging illegal export of Nvidia-equipped servers to China, violating U.S. trade restrictions.
The criminal indictment spawned a shareholder class action lawsuit filed in California, where investors claim the company deliberately concealed export regulation violations and provided misleading disclosures.
Rosenblatt Securities lowered its target to $32 from $50 while preserving a Buy recommendation, acknowledging the controversy’s impact. Bank of America adopted a more pessimistic stance, cutting its forecast from $34 to $24 with an Underperform rating as the export investigation unfolds.
Technical indicators show the 50-day moving average at $29.43 and the 200-day at $35.98. The stock has fluctuated between $19.48 and $62.36 over the past year.
Despite external pressures, SMCI’s recent quarterly performance impressed. The company delivered earnings per share of $0.69, surpassing the $0.49 consensus, while revenue reached $12.68 billion against expectations of $10.34 billion. The top line represented a 123.4% year-over-year increase.
Management projects Q3 2026 EPS at $0.60, with full-year EPS forecasted at $1.86 according to analyst consensus.
Wall Street Maintains Cautious Outlook
Analyst sentiment remains reserved across the Street. Among 17 firms covering the stock, 4 rate it Buy, 10 assign Hold ratings, and 3 recommend Sell. The consensus price target stands at $36.50.
Needham trimmed its forecast to $40 from $51 while retaining Buy. Bernstein SocGen maintained Market Perform with a $37 objective. Northland established a $22 target with Market Perform. Argus preserved its Hold rating without adjustment.
Institutional investors control 84.06% of outstanding shares. Multiple funds expanded positions during Q4, including HSBC, which boosted its holdings by 13.7%.
SMCI’s 8% gross margin continues to lag competitors, even as overall AI server expenditure is anticipated to expand at a 44% compound annual growth rate between 2024 and 2029.
Bank of America’s Underperform rating with a $24 price target represents the most pessimistic perspective among recent analyst updates.
