Key Takeaways
- Supermicro shares fell substantially this week, reversing some of the stock’s recent momentum.
- The company filed belated financial disclosures with the SEC this week, beating a deadline that could have meant delisting from the Nasdaq.
- The stock is still up about 35% so far in 2025—but is worth around half what it was a year ago.
Shares of Super Micro Computer (SMCI) finished the week lower even after the company avoided delisting on Tuesday.
The server maker’s stock surged leading up to and after a business update on Feb. 11 that culminated earlier this week with the filing of belated financial disclosures with the SEC. Supermicro said it was back in compliance with Nasdaq requirements and said “the matter is now closed.”
That has not, however, ended the stock’s volatile run. It closed Friday around $42 after finishing Wednesday above $50 a share. The stock lost about a quarter of its value this week and was lower for a second day in a row—while still about 35% higher so far in 2025. Zooming further out, the company is worth about half what it was a year ago.
At the company’s second-quarter update, CEO Charles Liang said Supermicro’s revenue could grow 60% in 2026 to $40 billion, driven by demand for its data center infrastructure solutions.
Supermicro shares ended Friday down about 3.5%, after falling as much as 9% earlier in the session.
This article was updated to reflect closing share-price information.