Over the last five years, the movement of Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) stock resembles that of an exciting altcoin. SMCI shares gained 1,434% value in that period, rising with the accelerating AI hype from late 2023 to an all-time high of $118.81 in March 2024.
The server company suffered reputational damage in September 2024 from the Hindenburg Research investment group, which had alleged nepotism and accounting malpractice. During 2025, SMCI stock volatility continued, rallying to $60.25 in February, only to drop to the current price level of $38.36 per share.
Nonetheless, Supermicro stock outperformed the S&P 500 (SPX) index year-to-date, at 22% vs flatlined 0.05% SPX gains. With such fruitful price swings in recent history, is it a good idea to consider SMCI stock exposure at its present level?
Why Did Supermicro Gain Prominence in the First Place?
Although it is possible to have a local large language model (LLM) running thanks to open-source frameworks and models, this will likely remain a niche sector. Case in point, of the global banked population (~6 billion), only 130.4 million individuals own Bitcoin. This is a tiny 2% stake compared to many benefits of having a decentralized store of value that has embedded scarcity.
In other words, there is always friction when it comes to integrating novel technology at a personal level. As we explored previously, the nature of AI is such that governments are making it happen via private-public partnerships (PPPs). From content generation and algorithmically regulating that content on a granular level, to productivity tools, the future seems to be AI-powered.
And as this new AI layer is added to human experience, it will require vast infrastructure in the form of data centers packed with servers. This is Supermicro’s primary fundamental supply of highly efficient server solutions. At present, the company’s flagship is the X14 Hyper system.
Featuring Intel’s CPU in a single socket system, and extensive memory and storage scaling, X14 series is purportedly 4x more performant than the last generation of dual socket systems. Such enterprise-grade solutions are critical for running simulations, AI training and general high-performance computing (HPC) workloads.
“The systems now shipping in volume promise to unlock new capabilities and levels of performance for our customers around the world, featuring low latency, maximum I/O expansion providing high throughput with 256 performance cores per system, 12 memory channels per CPU with MRDIMM support, and high performance EDSFF storage options.”
Charles Liang, Supermicro CEO in January 2025
Even before the wave of AI investments, Supermicro has been a key supplier to Big Tech companies such as Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), currently headed by Larry Ellison as the executive chairman. Since then, Supermicro has expanded its offering into liquid-cooled GPU servers and AI-optimized servers.
The question is, how crowded is the server market?
Supermicro’s Positioning in the Server Market
According to an International Data Corporation (IDC) report this April, the global server market expanded by 89% in Q4 2024. For the full year, the server market grew by 73.5%, compared to non-accelerated (not AI-related) server growth of 16.9% year-over-year.
Expanding into 2029, investors should expect to see a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 16.3% from the server market. According to CSIMarket, Supermicro holds 10.47% market share. Previously covered Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) holds the global server crown at 44.48%, followed by Hewlett-Packard.
Other Supermicro server rivals all fall under 2% market share. As with the wider semiconductor sector in general, this clearly points to heavy concentration, owing to its inherent complexity and scarcity of human capital.
Another filter is Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) itself, the primary beneficiary of the AI hype thanks to its full-stack solutions on both the software and hardware side. Although Nvidia partnered with Dell for its end-to-end AI Factory solutions, the company also has Supermicro as its preferred OEM partner.
In early February, Supermicro unrolled its first offering of Nvidia’s cutting-edge Blackwell GPUs within its plug-and-play AI Building Blocks modular infrastructure solutions.
Is the Server Macro (BCBA:BMAm) Scene Even More Bullish?
Substantial AI moves have occurred since Supermicro’s all-time high stock price of $118.81 in March 2024. Although China’s DeepSeek AI suggested that optimization could lead to lessened server demand, such a projection fails to account for market penetration.
At that time, the CEO of ASML (NASDAQ:ASML), a critical chip equipment maker, noted that AI usage is likely to offset such concerns.
“We believe that when it comes to the size of our business, the demand will come more from the use of AI”
Christophe Fouquet, CEO of ASML in late January 2025
Moreover, the server demand is yet to price in highly compute-demanding video generation, which has an inherent optimization cap. Not only does AI have to generate each frame, similar to text-to-image, but each frame has to have temporal consistency as an extra layer of complexity.
This also means that text-to-video output is less amenable to localized AI due to high resource requirements. Once again, this bodes well for Supermicro’s future demand.
Following President Trump’s inauguration, it is similarly bullish that the aforementioned Oracle chairman, Larry Ellison, led the White House presentation on the Stargate project, aiming for a $500 billion AI infrastructure funding. As explained previously, content generation is secondary to AI’s primary usage as governance technology.
Lastly, Supermicro is aligned with the Trump admin regarding tariff concerns, as an American-Taiwanese company and with Taiwan being an unofficial U.S. protectorate.
Supermicro’s Earnings and Price Target (NYSE:TGT)
For the quarter ending March 31st, 2025, Supermicro generated 19.5% more sales to $4.6 billion compared to the year-ago quarter. For the nine months ending March, the company delivered relatively the same level of profits, at $853.7 million compared to $855.4 million in 2024.
However, the R&D development expenses went significantly up in that period, from $86 million to $141.6 million. From a server-demand side, this is likely bullish as the company unrolls the next generation of server solutions to maintain its market share.
For the full fiscal 2025, Supermicro lowered revenue expectations, now within the $21.8 – $22.6 billion range from the previous $23.5 – $25 billion. In fiscal 2024, the company made $14.94 billion net sales, which is again significantly up from $7.12 billion in 2023.
At present, Supermicro holds a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 21.10 against the average 26.33 P/E in the IT sector. According to WSJ’s forecasting data, the average SMCI price target is $41.08 against the current price of $38.36 per share.
The bottom forecast is $15 while the ceiling price target for SMCI stock is $73 per share. Analyst outlook is somewhat divided, as 6 analysts view SMCI stock as “hold” while 5 think it should be bought at this price point. However, only 2 analysts think investors should sell.
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Neither the author, Tim Fries, nor this website, The Tokenist, provide financial advice. Please consult our website policy prior to making financial decisions.
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