Live: Supermicro Reports Q3 Earnings Tonight. Can Strong Results Spark a Rebound?
Quick Read
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Super Micro Computer (SMCI) delivered a 41.42% EPS beat in Q2 FY2026 with $12.68B revenue, but gross margin collapsed to 6.3% from 11.8% due to aggressive AI deployment pricing. Now, gross margin recovery and Data Center Building Block Solutions scaling will determine whether Super Micro can rebuild profitability amid intense competition in AI servers.
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This live blog is being updated by Thomas Richmond, a 24/7 Wall St. contributor. You’ll get expert analysis of Supermicro’s earnings. Simply stay on this page, and new updates will appear below automatically. We expect SMCI’s earnings to be released shortly after 4:50 p.m. ET.
Live Updates
SMCI Live Coverage Wrap-Up
That wraps up our initial coverage of SMCI’s Q3 results. Thank you for stopping by!
Margins Snap Back From the 6.3% Trough
SMCI’s margin recovery is real. Non-GAAP gross margin rebounded to 10.1% in Q3 FY2026, reversing the slide to 6.3% GAAP in Q2 and 9.3% in Q1. Management had warned that aggressive pricing on hyperscale AI deployments was crushing profitability, but the bounce suggests product mix is rotating toward higher-value DCBBS rack solutions while Blackwell shipments offer richer economics.
Operating leverage still trails. Q2 FY2026 operating margin sat near 3.7%, against 8.5% for full-year FY2024 and 10.7% in FY2023. R&D spending climbed to $636.55M in FY2025 from $307.26M in FY2023, structurally lifting the cost base. Q4 guidance of roughly $11.75B in revenue and $0.72 EPS implies margins stabilizing at this rebuilt level rather than expanding further.
The next test for SMCI is whether 10% margins hold as Blackwell Ultra ramps and inventory unwinds.
Revisiting SMCI's Bear Case After Q!
Revisiting the Bear Case
Four pre-earnings concerns dominated: margin compression, guidance reliability, cash flow strain, and customer concentration. Tonight’s Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI | SMCI Price Prediction) report addressed each unevenly.
- Margins: Busted. Non-GAAP gross margin rebounded to 10.1% from 6.3%.
- Guidance: Busted. Q4 revenue guided to ~$11.75B vs. $11.06B expected.
- Cash flow: Validated. Operating cash flow was -$6.6B, with inventory at $11.1B.
- Concentration: Validated. Revenue missed at $10.24B vs. $12.39B expected, signaling lumpy hyperscale timing.
Bears will argue that the $8.8B debt stack against $1.3 billion in cash makes this a financing story. Bulls counter that EPS of $0.84 beat $0.62 estimates, and the 19.85% one-month rally reflects restored pricing power.
SMCI's Q4 Guidance Tops Expectations, but FY26 Math Gets Tighter
SMCI’s management guided for Q4 revenue of roughly $11.75 billion versus the $11.06 billion Street consensus, with EPS of about $0.72 against $0.55 expected. That is a clear rise relative to sell-side models and explains the 17% post-earnings pop.
The subtler signal is that management is implicitly walking back the at-least $40.0 billion FY26 target reiterated in February. After tonight’s $10.24 billion Q3 and a $11.75B Q4 outlook, the full-year run-rate lands closer to the high $30s billion range. Guidance materially beat on EPS while only modestly exceeding top-line expectations.
Key assumptions that will hopefully be discussed on tonight’s earnings call:
- Sustainability of the 10.1% non-GAAP gross margin as Blackwell Ultra ships.
- Whether the $11.1 billion inventory build converts cleanly into Q4 revenue.
SMCI Soars 18% on "C+" Quarter
Overall Grade: C+
Strong EPS, margin recovery, and bullish guidance offset a revenue miss and deeply negative cash flow.
| Category | Grade | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue Performance | D | $10.24B vs. $12.39B expected, a wide miss. |
| Earnings Beat/Miss | A | EPS $0.84 vs. $0.62 expected. |
| Guidance Quality | A- | Q4 revenue guide ~$11.75B tops consensus. |
| Margin Trends | B | Non-GAAP gross margin rebounded to 10.1% from 6.3%. |
| Cash Flow | F | Operating cash flow swung to -$6.6B; inventory $11.1B. |
| Management Confidence | B+ | Insiders net buyers across 66 transactions. |
Overall Assessment
Supermicro (NASDAQ:SMCI) delivered a split report. Non-GAAP gross margin climbed to 10.1%, and EPS beat handily. Forward guidance topped Street models, validating CEO Charles Liang’s view that AI server demand remains durable.
The revenue shortfall and balance-sheet pressure complicate the story: $11.1B inventory, $8.8B in debt, and -$6.6B in operating cash flow signal that scaling Blackwell deployments is consuming working capital faster than revenue converts.
With analysts targeting $33.2 against today’s $27.83, the next checkpoint is Q4 execution and whether cash conversion improves before leverage becomes a headline risk.
Supermicro’s Margin Recovery Is Happening Even as Revenue Falls
Super Micro Computer reported gross margin of 9.9%, up from 6.3% last quarter and slightly above 9.6% a year ago.
The key detail is how it happened. Revenue fell sequentially from $12.7B to $10.2B, but margins still improved.
That points to a shift in mix and pricing. The company is moving away from the aggressive discounting tied to large AI deployments and toward higher-value systems and better execution.
If this holds, Supermicro could move from a low-margin, high-volume growth business to a model where margins scale alongside revenue.
Supermicro’s Balance Sheet Is Expanding Faster Than Revenue
Supermicro delivered a quarter that looks strong on the surface, but one detail stands out beneath the headline numbers.
The company generated $10.2 billion in revenue, down sequentially from $12.7 billion last quarter, while gross margin rebounded sharply to 9.9%. Net income continued to scale, reaching $483 million, up more than 4x from a year ago.
However, Supermicro burned $6.6 billion in operating cash flow in a single quarter, while ending with just $1.3 billion in cash against $8.8 billion in debt.
That gap is being driven by aggressive working capital expansion as the company builds inventory and fulfills large AI system deployments. In simple terms, Supermicro is front-loading massive amounts of capital to meet demand before that demand shows up in revenue and cash flow.
The takeaway is that SMCI is becoming a capital-intensive scale story, where execution depends on how efficiently the company converts this balance sheet build into future revenue and margins.
Supermicro Q3 Earnings Are Out. Stock Jumps 17% Despite Big Revenue Miss
Key Numbers:
- Revenue: $10.24B vs. $12.39B expected
- Adjusted EPS: $0.84 vs. $0.62 expected
- Gross Margin (Non-GAAP): 10.1% (vs. 6.3% last quarter)
- Operating Cash Flow: -$6.6B
- Inventory: $11.1B
- Total Debt: $8.8B
Guidance:
- Q4 Revenue: ~$11.75B vs. $11.06B expected
- Q4 EPS: ~$0.72 vs. $0.55 expected
Quick Read:
- Big EPS beat and sharp margin recovery to 10.1%, but revenue missed by a wide margin
- Strong forward guidance is driving the stock higher, even as working capital and balance sheet risks build
Shares are initially up 17% following the report. Profitability is recovering fast, and guidance came in strong, which is what the market is rewarding. But the revenue miss, combined with a massive inventory build and -$6.6B in operating cash flow, suggests execution is getting more complex as the company scales.
Supermicro’s Q3 Earnings Come Down to One Thing
This Quarter Decides the AI Server Thesis
Investors are watching Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) ahead of its Q3 FY2026 report tonight at 4:50 PM EST, with the stock under pressure despite explosive growth.
Last quarter delivered massive upside. Revenue surged 123% year over year to $12.68 billion, and EPS beat by more than 40%. CEO Charles Liang even raised full-year guidance to at least $40 billion, calling it conservative.
The story now centers on margin and cash conversion. If Supermicro hits the 30bp gross margin uptick, shows DCBBS scaling, and lifts full-year guidance again, the bull case rebuilds quickly.
If margins stall and working capital strains return, the bears get their evidence that the company’s AI server pricing power is leaking. This earnings report also sets the tone for NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin cycle.
Insider activity skews bullish with net buying across 66 transactions since Q2’s results.
Investors are watching Supermicro (NASDAQ: SMCI) ahead of Q3 FY2026 results, expected after the bell this week. After a blowout December quarter, the central question now is whether gross margins can climb back from a 6.3% trough.
Margin Recovery Is the Whole Story
Last quarter delivered the biggest beat in years. Revenue hit $12.68 billion, up 123.36% year over year and topping the $10.341 billion consensus. Non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.69 versus $0.4879 expected, a 41.42% beat.
Despite all the good news, GAAP gross margin compressed year-over-year from 11.8% to 6.3% due to aggressive pricing on large AI deployments and a single customer that drove 63% of total revenue. CEO Charles Liang raised the FY26 revenue outlook to at least $40 billion, calling it “a relatively conservative number.” Shares have drifted lower regardless. SMCI is down 5.9% since the Feb. 3 earnings report and 17.18% over the past year, last trading at $27.73.
Q3 FY2026 Guidance vs. Year-Ago Quarter
| Metric | Q3 FY26 Guide (floor) | Q3 FY25 Actual |
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| Revenue | $12.30B | $4.60B |
| Non-GAAP EPS | $0.60 | $0.31 |
| GAAP EPS | $0.52 | n/a |
| FY26 Revenue | At least $40.0B (vs. FY25 actual $21.97B) | |
Watching Margins, Mix, and the Order Book
I’ll be watching three things above all else.
First, gross margins. Liang guided to non-GAAP gross margin “up 30 basis points relative to Q2 FY ’26 levels” and said he expects gross and net margins to “grow to double digits as soon as possible.” The market’s going to be looking for at least 6.7% gross margins, which would be a 30 bp step-up from Q2.
Second, DCBBS. Liang said Data Center Building Block Solutions accounted for “4% of our profit” in the first half, with margins “more than 20%.” He expects that to reach a double-digit contribution by the end of calendar 2026. Any acceleration here directly attacks the margin problem.
Third, the Blackwell Ultra order book. Last quarter, Supermicro disclosed more than $13 billion in Blackwell Ultra orders. Conversion velocity, plus any commitments around NVIDIA Vera Rubin and AMD Helios platforms, will tell you how loaded H2 looks.
Investors will also be watching operating cash flow after Q1’s -$917.52 million swing, customer concentration after the disclosure that one customer drove 63% of revenue, and whether the company raises full-year guidance for the third time this year.
Thomas Richmond is a financial writer and content strategist with 5+ years of experience covering stocks and financial markets. He has published over 250 articles focused on individual stock analysis, helping investors better understand business fundamentals, stock valuations, and long-term opportunities.
Thomas previously served as a Content Lead at TIKR, a stock research platform, where he helped scale the company’s blog to hundreds of articles per month and contributed to a weekly newsletter reaching more than 100,000 investors.
He specializes in breaking down complex companies into clear, actionable insights for everyday investors, with a focus on fundamentals-driven research.
His work has also been featured on platforms including Seeking Alpha and Sure Dividend.
Outside of work, Thomas enjoys weight lifting and soccer.
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