Shares of Super Micro Computer (SMCI) tumbled 9% during after-hours trading Tuesday following the company’s announcement of a comprehensive $7 billion capital raising initiative through multiple equity-based financing instruments.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
Prior to the disclosure, the stock had posted gains of roughly 39% since the start of the year.
The financing structure consists of a $5 billion underwritten offering split between $3.75 billion in depositary shares and $1.25 billion in common stock sold to institutional underwriters. Additionally, the company plans an at-the-market program allowing for up to $2 billion in sales, though this component won’t commence until the third quarter at the earliest.
The syndicate managing the transaction includes JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup.
Equity offerings typically create downward pressure on share prices as the expanded share count dilutes existing shareholders’ ownership stakes. Tuesday’s after-hours reaction aligns with this historical pattern.
According to the company, capital raised will be directed toward acquiring hardware components necessary to fulfill its expanding order pipeline.
Super Micro revealed it has accumulated $39 billion worth of AI server orders from more than 20 major clients during recent weeks. This substantial demand has been instrumental in driving the company’s revenue expansion.
During the quarter ending in March, Super Micro posted revenue growth exceeding 100% compared to the prior year period. As a comparison point, Dell’s Infrastructure Solutions Group reported 181% year-over-year growth during that same timeframe.
During the May earnings conference call, CEO Charles Liang informed analysts that memory component costs have surged more than threefold in recent months, creating significant pressure on procurement budgets. The $7 billion capital raise is designed to provide sufficient liquidity to maintain pace with customer demand.
Super Micro also indicated that portions of the proceeds may be allocated toward retiring existing debt, bolstering working capital reserves, and funding capital expenditure projects.
Super Micro’s capital raise is part of a larger industry trend as technology companies seek financing for AI infrastructure expansion. Alphabet completed an $84.75 billion expanded equity offering the previous week, which included a $10 billion commitment from Berkshire Hathaway.
This fundraising activity highlights the widespread effort throughout the AI ecosystem to secure capital as data center infrastructure requirements intensify.
In a separate development, a Super Micro co-founder stepped down from the company’s board of directors in March following inclusion in a federal indictment related to alleged illegal shipment of equipment containing Nvidia AI chips to China.
The company noted it may deploy a portion of the raised capital for general corporate purposes beyond component acquisition.
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