Mizuho Securities reduced its price objective for Super Micro Computer (SMCI) from $33 down to $25 this past Monday, while retaining its “Neutral” stance on the shares. This downward revision reflects a confluence of challenges including regulatory scrutiny, geopolitical trade tensions, and intensifying competition.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
The stock commenced Monday’s trading session at $23.22, positioning it below Mizuho’s updated target and significantly under InvestingPro’s calculated fair value of $32.45.
Mizuho’s analysts continue to view AI infrastructure demand as a positive catalyst extending into 2026 and 2027, highlighting that Nvidia’s data center revenue remains on track for growth exceeding 50% year-over-year in 2027. Cloud service provider capital expenditure is projected to reach $689 billion in 2026, representing a 64% annual increase.
However, the firm identified immediate concerns linked to evolving China trade policies, suggesting potential order redirections toward Dell Technologies. Analysts emphasized that Dell operates an AI services organization ten times larger than SMCI’s and maintains an approximately $85 billion opportunity pipeline.
Concurrently with reducing SMCI’s target, Mizuho elevated its Dell price objective to $215.
Compounding these challenges, SMCI co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw entered a not guilty plea to federal charges alleging the illegal diversion of Nvidia-equipped servers to China, contravening U.S. export restrictions.
This criminal indictment has spawned a class action complaint in California, where shareholders claim the company failed to disclose export regulation breaches and provided misleading information to the investment community.
Rosenblatt Securities reduced its price target from $50 to $32 while preserving its Buy recommendation, acknowledging the controversy. Bank of America adopted a more pessimistic view, slashing its target from $34 to $24 alongside an Underperform rating as the export investigation unfolds.
Technical indicators show the stock’s 50-day moving average at $29.43 and its 200-day average at $35.98. The 52-week trading range extends from $19.48 to $62.36.
Despite mounting pressures, SMCI delivered robust financial results in its most recent quarterly report. The company reported earnings per share of $0.69, surpassing the $0.49 consensus estimate, while revenue of $12.68 billion exceeded projections of $10.34 billion. Top-line growth reached 123.4% compared to the prior-year period.
Management provided guidance for Q3 2026 EPS of $0.60, with full-year EPS forecasted at $1.86 according to analyst estimates.
The collective analyst perspective remains measured. Among 17 firms covering the equity, 4 maintain Buy ratings, 10 assign Hold ratings, and 3 rate it Sell. The consensus price target stands at $36.50.
Needham reduced its objective from $51 to $40 while retaining its Buy rating. Bernstein SocGen maintained Market Perform with a $37 target. Northland established a $22 target with Market Perform. Argus preserved its Hold rating without modifying its target.
Institutional investors control 84.06% of outstanding shares. Multiple asset managers expanded their positions during the fourth quarter, including HSBC, which boosted its holding by 13.7%.
SMCI’s gross profit margin of 8% continues to represent a competitive disadvantage, despite forecasts projecting AI server expenditure to expand at a 44% compound annual growth rate from 2024 through 2029.
Bank of America currently maintains the most bearish outlook among recent updates, with its Underperform rating and $24 price target.
The post Super Micro Computer (SMCI) Stock Downgraded Amid Legal Woes and Geopolitical Headwinds appeared first on Blockonomi.


