Super Micro shares plunge over 30% after employee smuggling charges

Super Micro Computer's stock fell more than 30% after US authorities charged employees, including a co-founder, with smuggling AI chips to China. The Department of Justice findings support the company's compliance and internal controls, with no charges against Super Micro itself. The incident involved an estimated $2.5 billion in smuggled sales, about 10% of the firm's FY25 revenue.

Super Micro Computer, Inc. (SMCI) shares slumped over 30% following the announcement of charges against certain employees for smuggling AI chips to China. The charges included a co-founder, but the company was not implicated in the Department of Justice (DOJ) case, which followed an extensive investigation into the matter. DOJ findings affirmed Super Micro's compliance and internal controls, resulting in no legal action against the firm itself despite the alarming headlines generated by the employee charges. The estimated value of smuggled sales in the case was $2.5 billion, representing approximately 10% of Super Micro's FY25 revenue levels. Company guidance for FY26 remains at $40 billion, indicating no expected impact from the incident. The article on Seeking Alpha notes that the stock was trading at a relatively low valuation prior to the selloff, amid the company's ongoing growth and development of new products. This development occurred as reported on March 22, 2026.

Makala yanayohusiana

Three Supermicro employees face charges of conspiracy to smuggle restricted Nvidia H100, H200 and B200 chips to China. The alleged $2.5 billion scheme used dummy boxes, fake labels and a pass-through company. TechRadar describes it as the biggest heist of the US-China chip war.

Imeripotiwa na AI

On Wednesday, United States authorities charged Chinese nationals and companies in two separate cases with offenses including conspiring to smuggle advanced AI chips to China and drug trafficking with money laundering. One case involves smuggling American-made AI chips via Thailand, the other an alleged fentanyl supply chain.

China's GPU leaders Cambricon and MetaX reported strong first-quarter results driven by demand for local AI chips. Cambricon's revenue jumped 160 per cent year-on-year to 2.89 billion yuan (US$423 million), with profit soaring 185 per cent to 1 billion yuan. The Beijing-based firm attributed the growth to a 'sustained surge in the AI industry’s computing power demand'.

Imeripotiwa na AI

China's State Administration for Market Regulation fined seven platforms from PDD Holdings, Meituan, JD.com, Alibaba and ByteDance a record 3.6 billion yuan (US$528 million) over 67,000 unlicensed 'ghost' bakeries. The probe revealed hidden offices, violent clashes and an employee swallowing notes to obstruct investigators. Incidents occurred during a December on-site inspection at Pinduoduo.

Jumatano, 6. Mwezi wa tano 2026, 20:33:58

TSMC faces growing foundry competition amid AI demand

Jumatatu, 27. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 08:56:44

Yuanjie Semiconductor’s Q1 profit soars 1,153% on AI demand

Alhamisi, 2. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 21:54:53

Chinese memory vendor panics as RAM prices dip

Jumanne, 24. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 13:55:53

Xiaomi leader warns memory costs may imperil smartphone makers

Jumanne, 10. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 18:04:38

TSMC viewed as bargain buy despite recent market fears

Ijumaa, 27. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 21:51:35

Micron trades at low free cash flow yield in cyclical market

Alhamisi, 26. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 06:59:56

South Korean investors pour millions into Chinese AI stocks

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa