Supermicro Stock Fell This Week as Avoiding Delisting Hasn't Ended Volatility
Key Takeaways
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.