The Super Micro Computer Inc. headquarters in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Super Micro Computer shares fell as much as 10% during trading on Tuesday as the company nears a deadline to file audited financial reports or be delisted from the Nasdaq exchange.
Earlier this month, Super Micro CEO Charles Liang told investors he was “confident” that the company could file those reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission by Feb. 25, a deadline set by Nasdaq. The company must file its audited annual report for fiscal 2024 and the first two quarters of fiscal 2025.
If Super Micro fails to file the reports, its stock could be delisted from Nasdaq. It could also ask for another extension of up to 180 days.
Super Micro representatives did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
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Last fall, Super Micro shares slumped in August after the company delayed releasing its annual report for the year ending in June. Ernst & Young, the company’s auditor, quit citing governance issues in October. Super Micro named BDO as its new auditor in November. The company has also been targeted by an activist short seller, Hindenburg Research, which alleged accounting fraud.
The uncertainty has led to a roller coaster for the stock. It plunged last year to a low of about $18 per share in November after soaring more than 14-fold from the end of 2022 to its peak in March last year. So far in 2025, Super Micro’s stock price has risen more than 55%.
Throughout this saga, Super Micro has risen to a higher level of prominence as its revenue has surged as a result of the boom in artificial intelligence. The biggest driver of Super Micro’s growth is that it sells systems based around Nvidia graphics processing units, or GPUs, needed to build server clusters for AI. Elon Musk’s xAI, for example, buys Super Micro systems.
According to its unaudited financials, Super Micro sales more than doubled in its fiscal 2024 to $14.94 billion. Analysts expect about $5.37 billion in revenue for the current quarter, which would be a nearly 40% increase year over year.
The SEC’s system for accepting filings can receive documents as late as 10 p.m. ET, and depending on how late the filing is made, it can become public the next morning.
— CNBC’s Samantha Subin and Kristina Partsinevelos contributed to this report.
For the third year in a row, CNBC is working with market research firm Statista to list the world’s top financial technology companies.
Including startups, scaleups and established tech players, the top global fintech list aims to assess companies using an objective, key performance indicator-based methodology.
You can find out more information on the research project and methodology by clicking here.
Woman using digital tablet and credit card to do shopping.
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Applications are now open for companies to register their information for consideration by Statista’s researchers. To qualify, a company must focus primarily on developing innovative, technology-based financial products and services.
This year, we’re also digging deeper into the research to name the standout companies operating in the U.K. — the largest fintech market in Europe, as measured by the amount of funding raised.
Applications from companies headquartered in the U.K. will — in addition to being considered for the global fintech list — also be considered for a separate list of the U.K.’s top fintech companies. Firms do not need to fill in a separate application to be considered for the U.K. ranking.
Last year, fintech startups in the U.K. raised $3.6 billion in venture capital, ranking second worldwide and first in Europe for funding, according to industry trade body Innovate Finance. The country is also home to Revolut, Europe’s biggest fintech unicorn with a $45 billion valuation.
How to apply
Companies can submit their information for consideration by clicking here. The form, hosted by Statista, includes questions about a company’s business model and certain key performance indicators, including revenue growth and employee headcount.
The deadline for submissions is April 25, 2025.
If you have any questions about the lists or need assistance filling out the form, please reach out to Statista: topfintechs@statista.com.
Successful companies will be listed in the category that most closely reflects their business model. This year, insurance technology will be included as a category in the global fintech list. The other categories are payments, neobanking, digital assets, alternative financing, wealth technology, and enterprise fintech.
You can check out last year’s list here, which included well-known brands such as Mastercard and China’s Ant Group, global unicorns such as Brazilian digital lender Nubank and buy now, pay later firm Klarna, as well as smaller disruptors including payments platform Primer and investing app Stash.
Charles Liang, CEO of Super Micro Computer Inc., during the Computex conference in Taipei, Taiwan, on June 5, 2024.
Annabelle Chih | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Super Micro Computer reported its delayed financial results on Tuesday just in time to meet the Nasdaq’s listing deadline. Shares of the server maker popped 22% in extended trading after the filing.
“In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company at June 30, 2024,” BDO, the company’s auditor, wrote in the filing, adding that the results are “in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted” in the U.S.
Super Micro filed updated and audited financials with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for its fiscal 2024, ending in June, and the firsttwo quarters of the company’s fiscal 2025. The filing reduces any near-term possibility that the server maker could be delisted from the Nasdaq, an overhang that had weighed on Super Micro’s stock price.
“The Company has received correspondence from the Nasdaq staff that the Company has regained compliance with the filing requirements, and the matter is now closed,” Super Micro said in a press release.
Last year, after the company delayed its annual report, it lost its auditor, Ernst & Young, citing governance issues. Super Micro had until Tuesday to become current and file audited financials with the SEC.
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Super Micro said in a note from management as part of the filing that it had identified material weaknesses in internal controls over financial reporting, including IT issues, a lack of documentation over manual journal entries and insufficient controls to address segregation of staff duties. Super Micro said that it is hiring additional accounting and audit employees, as well as upgrading its IT systems.
Super Micro also said in Tuesday’s filing that a special committee of its Board overseeing its financial statements did not believe that EY’s resignation was “supported by the facts” examined by the committee.
In December, Super Micro said a review found “no evidence of misconduct.” At the same time, it removed its former chief financial officer, David Weigand. The company has not named a new CFO.
Still, the business has been growing rapidly because of soaring demand for Nvidia’s graphics processing units, or GPUs, which are used to develop artificial intelligence. Super Micro builds systems around Nvidia’s GPUs, and Elon Musk’s xAI is a customer.
According to the company’s updated and audited financials, Super Micro’s sales more than doubled in its fiscal 2024 to $14.99 billion.
Super Micro said it still faces risks related to its late financial reports, including litigation, reputational harm, and potentially lower credit ratings.
The stock has rebounded so far this year from a brutal last nine months of 2023. Before Tuesday’s postmarket surge, it was up 52% so far in 2025.
Carl Eschenbach, CEO of Workday, speaks on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” outside the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 23, 2025.
Gerry Miller | CNBC
Workday, a maker of human resources and finance software, reported better-than-expected quarterly results on Tuesday. The shares popped more than 10% in extended trading.
Here’s how the company did in comparison with LSEG consensus:
Earnings per share: $1.92 adjusted vs. $1.78 expected
Revenue: $2.21 billion vs. $2.18 billion expected
Revenue increased 15% year over year in the quarter that ended on Jan. 31, according to a statement. Net income fell to $94 million, or 35 cents per share, from $1.19 billion, or $4.52 per share, in the same quarter a year earlier.
“The prior year period benefited from a $1.1 billion release of the valuation allowance related to U.S. federal and state deferred tax assets,” Workday said.
The company is seeing greater demand for artificial intelligence tools.
“In fact, AI is front and center in every conversation I have with customers, prospects and partners. They want to move beyond incremental productivity gains,” CEO Carl Eschenbach said on a conference call with analysts. “They’re also looking for ROI that helps them drive growth back into their business,” Eschenbach added.
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Around 30% of Workday’s expansions with existing clients drew on at least one AI product, in line with the previous quarter, Eschenbach said. Additional AI products will become available over the next year, he said.
The rise of the Department of Government Efficiency creates opportunity for Workday, which has focused more on federal sales over the past year and a half, Eschenbach said.
“The systems they have, specifically ERP, HCM, or financial systems, are very antiquated,” he said. “In fact, the majority of them are still on premises, which means they’re inefficient. And as we think about DOGE and what that could potentially do going forward, if you want to drive efficiency in the government, you have to upgrade your systems,” the CEO added.
After becoming Workday’s sole CEO last year, he said the company has hired Google Cloud executive Gerrit Kazmaier to be president of products and technology. Sayan Chakraborty, who currently holds that title, will retire after being at Workday for about a decade.
During the quarter, Workday announced the hiring of former UiPath CEO Rob Enslin as its new president and chief commercial officer. Workday also said it would use AI to summarize employee feedback in its Peakon product.
The company called for a 28% adjusted operating margin on $2.05 billion in subscription revenue for the fiscal first quarter. Analysts polled by StreetAccount had expected an adjusted margin of 26.7% and $2.06 billion in revenue.
For fiscal 2026, Workday now sees an adjusted margin of 28%, with $8.8 billion in subscription revenue, implying 14% growth. That is slightly higher than the forecast management gave in November.
As of Tuesday’s close, Workday shares were flat year over year, while the S&P 500 index was up 1%.