Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) crashed this morning after federal prosecutors unsealed a bombshell indictment charging a company co-founder and high-ranking employees with a massive scheme to smuggle advanced AI technology to China.

SMCI stock tanked more than 25% in early trading as investors learned that Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw – a co-founder – and board member allegedly participated in a backdoor operation to divert $2.5 billion worth of restricted Nvidia-powered servers to Chinese entities.

This legal nightmare follows a string of accounting probes and the high-profile resignation of the company’s auditor, Ernst & Young, late last year.

Versus its February high, Supermicro shares are down some 35% at the time of writing.

Why SMCI stock pullback isn’t a buying opportunity

While the server maker claims it was not a named defendant in the case, the market is voting with its feet, fearing that Nvidia may now be forced to cut off its supply of Blackwell chips to protect its own regulatory standing.

Even if it doesn’t, however, one simple reason to avoid buying this dip in SMCI shares is the fact that this company continues to fall into one controversy after another.

For seasoned investors, this isn’t just bad luck; it’s a systemic red flag.

Wall Street can forgive a bad quarter, but it rarely forgives a persistent lack of internal controls.

The fact that a co-founder – who had already resigned once following a 2018 accounting scandal, only to be rehired in 2022 – is at the center of a federal smuggling investigation suggests a culture of non-compliance.

When a company repeatedly finds itself in the crosshairs of the DOJ or the SEC, the risk of “terminal value” destruction becomes real.

In this case, the controversy threatens the very lifeblood of the business: its partnership with chip giant Nvidia.

Why bottom fish when Nvidia itself is on sale

Value hunters might argue that SMCI stock looks “cheap” at roughly 17x forward earnings, but that argument loses its teeth when you look at the rest of the sector.

Currently, Nvidia itself is trading at a significantly compressed valuation compared to its historical highs, often hovering near similar forward multiples when adjusted for its massive growth rate.

As Alger’s Ankur Crawford recently noted in a CNBC interview, when the market gives you a chance to buy the undisputed king of AI – Nvidia – at a reasonable price, there is no logical reason to “bottom fish” in other names.

Nvidia offers pure-play exposure to the AI revolution without the “baggage” of federal indictments or missing financial audits that remain an overhang on Supermicro stock.

Supermicro shares may just be a value trap

All in all, it’s just not about how fast Super Micro Computer can build a liquid-cooled rack or how much revenue it might generate in 2027.

It’s simply the fact that in a market filled with reliable, high-growth alternatives like Dell or Nvidia, which are also trading at bargains, there’s no reason to take on “controversy risk.”

In investing, your capital is your most precious resource, and tying it up in a company that requires a legal team to explain its quarterly earnings is a recipe for underperformance.

When the dip is caused by a fundamental breakdown in corporate integrity, as in the case of SMCI stock, it’s not an opportunity to buy; it’s often a warning sign to stay away.

The post One simple reason to ‘avoid’ buying the dip in SMCI stock today appeared first on Invezz

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