11% Stock Drop Despite 123% Growth
Super Micro Computer (SMCI) dropped 11% this week despite crushing earnings on February 3rd. Wall Street focused this week on margin pressures, which led to more pressure on shares.
Goldman Sachs turned bearish on Super Micro citing margin compression and limited bargaining power with hyperscaler customers.
Multiple Super Micro executives sold shares in late November. No insiders bought during this week’s 11% decline.
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Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) dropped 11.2% this week, closing at $30.54 on Friday.
The decline stands out against the broader market’s modest pullback. The S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY) fell 1.3% and the Nasdaq-100 (NASDAQ:QQQ) dropped 1.3% over the same period. Despite the weekly selloff, SMCI remains up 4.3% year-to-date. Three storylines explain what moved the stock this week.
Super Micro’s Q2 fiscal 2026 results came out on February 3rd and Wall Street continues to ‘digest’ what the company reported.
Super Micro delivered $12.7 billion in revenue, representing 123% year-over-year growth. Wall Street was expecting $10.3 billion in sales, so this was an incredible beat on the top line.
CEO Charles Liang raised the full-year revenue target to $40 billion, calling it “conservative”. The AI server boom is real. But investors aren’t celebrating.
Gross margins compressed to 6.3%, a new low. That’s the problem. Revenue is exploding, but investors are focusing more on compressing margins in an extremely competitive industry. In late 2023, Super Micro had 15.6%gross margins. They slipped below 10% at the beginning of 2025, and are now below 7%.
Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) analyst Katherine Murphy turned bearish, citing margin compression, competitive dynamics, and limited bargaining power versus hyperscaler customers. JR Research downgraded the stock to Hold, warning that intensifying competition from Dell and potential Nvidia offerings pose risks.
Management believes margins will improve through their Data Center Building Block Solutions expansion. But analysts remain skeptical about timing and magnitude. The market is pricing in doubt.
Multiple executives and directors sold shares in late November 2025. CEO Charles Liang and 10% owner Sara Liu each disposed of 5,000 shares. Director Sherman Tuan sold 48,630 shares at $33, the largest transaction in the recent period.