Super Micro Computer Inc SMCI is seizing its moment in the AI hardware spotlight. The San Jose-based company's stock jumped 5.3% Friday after it announced global volume shipments of its Nvidia Corp NVDA Blackwell Ultra-powered systems — high-performance racks designed for AI workloads at unprecedented scale.
The announcement comes at a critical time for the sector: OpenAI and Nvidia are reportedly planning to invest billions in new UK data centers in partnership with London-based Nscale Global, which already relies heavily on Supermicro hardware. That makes SMCI's cutting-edge infrastructure a likely beneficiary of some of the world's most ambitious AI expansion plans.
Supermicro's Blackwell Ultra systems, including the NVIDIA HGX B300 and GB300 NVL72 racks, promise up to 7.5× the performance of Nvidia's Hopper platform, 50% more HBM3e memory, and as much as 1.1 exaFLOPS of FP4 compute. Liquid cooling reduces power consumption by up to 40%, addressing one of the biggest bottlenecks in AI data center growth.
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With more than 10 new SKUs featuring Blackwell and Blackwell Ultra, Supermicro is positioning itself as a one-stop shop for companies racing to deploy AI infrastructure at scale. Its pre-validated, plug-and-play systems simplify network topology, cabling, power delivery, and thermal management, reducing setup times for enterprise and hyperscale customers.
The convergence of Nvidia's chip dominance, OpenAI's global data center ambitions, and Supermicro's expertise in rack-level deployment gives SMCI a strategic edge.
Rather than a niche hardware supplier, the company is increasingly emerging as the backbone of AI factories worldwide.
For investors, the rally could be a preview of a longer-term growth story tied directly to the AI spending supercycle.
SMCI Price Action: Super Micro Computer shares were up 3.49% at $45.48 at the time of publication on Friday. The stock is trading within its 52-week range of $17.25 to $66.43, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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