Super Micro Computer (SMCI) dropped 9% in after-hours trading on Tuesday after the company revealed plans to raise $7 billion through a series of equity and equity-linked financing transactions.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
The stock had been up about 39% year-to-date before the announcement hit.
The financing package includes $3.75 billion in depositary shares and $1.25 billion in common stock sold to underwriters, totalling a $5 billion underwritten offering. A separate at-the-market offering of up to $2 billion is also planned, with that portion not expected to begin before the third quarter.
JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup are handling the arrangements.
Stock sales tend to pressure a company’s price as existing investors face dilution. Tuesday’s move follows that pattern.
The company said the proceeds will go toward purchasing hardware components needed to fulfill a growing order backlog.
Super Micro said it has received $39 billion in AI server orders from more than 20 customers over the past few weeks. That demand has been a key driver of the company’s revenue growth.
In the March quarter, Super Micro’s revenue grew more than 100% year over year. For context, Dell reported 181% year-over-year growth in its Infrastructure Solutions Group over the same period.
CEO Charles Liang told analysts on the May earnings call that memory costs have more than tripled in recent months, putting pressure on component expenses. The $7 billion raise is aimed at giving the company enough capital to keep up.
Super Micro also said it may use a portion of the net proceeds for debt repayment, working capital additions and capital expenditures.
Super Micro is not alone in tapping equity markets to fund AI infrastructure. Alphabet raised $84.75 billion through an upsized equity offering last week, including a $10 billion investment from Berkshire Hathaway.
The pattern reflects a broader push across the AI sector to secure capital as demand for data center capacity accelerates.
In March, a Super Micro co-founder resigned from its board after being named in a federal indictment over allegations of smuggling equipment containing Nvidia AI chips into China.
Super Micro said it may also allocate a portion of proceeds to general corporate purposes beyond the component purchases.
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