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Supermicro, a major beneficiary of the AI boom, saw its stock plunge after Ernst & Young resigned as its auditor, raising market concerns. According to a report from Liberty Times, citing Chinese media outlet Cailian Press, NVIDIA, which has close ties to Supermicro, is shifting orders that were previously directed to Supermicro to other suppliers in order to avoid market disruptions.
According to the report, Supermicro’s competitors, GIGABYTE and ASRock, have benefited from the order transfer, seeing an increase in new orders and customer inquiries.
On October 30th, Supermicro announced that Ernst & Young, one of the Big Four accounting firms, had severed ties with the company. In its resignation letter, Ernst & Young stated that it was “unwilling to be associated with the financial statements prepared by management” and could “no longer rely on management’s and the Audit Committee’s representations” regarding their relationship with Supermicro.
The report noted that this statement caused Supermicro’s share price to drop sharply, plunging 32% that day. The company is now facing the risk of delisting.
Previously, on August 27, Supermicro was accused of accounting violations, inadequate disclosure of related party transactions, and evading sanctions by selling products to Russia by Hindenburg Research. The following day, Supermicro also announced a delay in submitting its 2024 fiscal year 10-K annual report.
According to a report from Wall Street Journal in late September, Supermicro was under the investigation of the U.S. Department of Justice.
The report from Liberty Times citing Cailian Press indicated that if the rumors about NVIDIA’s order transfer turn out to be true, it would undoubtedly be a further blow to the troubled firm.
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(Photo credit: Supermicro)
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On August 27, AI server giant Supermicro was accused of accounting violations, inadequate disclosure of related party transactions, and evading sanctions by selling products to Russia by short-seller Hindenburg Research.
In addition, Supermicro announced on August 28 that it would delay the release of its annual report, potentially facing order withdrawals. Industry sources also believe this news presents a chance for Supermicro’s competitor Dell to gain market share.
Besides Dell, a report from Commercial Times also points out that Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) could benefit from the shift in orders, potentially boosting shipments for its Taiwanese supply chain partners such as Wistron, Inventec, Quanta, and Foxconn.
The report from Commercial Times also cite sources, suggesting that this shift could provide Gigabyte, which is actively promoting its liquid-cooled products for NVIDIA’s H200 series, with opportunities in the second half of the year.
Wistron, as a key supplier of motherboard and GPU accelerator cards for NVIDIA’s Hopper and Blackwell GPU, is not only a major supplier for Supermicro’s server motherboards but also for Dell. Its clients include HPE and Lenovo as well, which makes the company one of the primary beneficiaries.
Similarly, Inventec, one of the server motherboard suppliers, is also expected to benefit if the shift in orders boosts Dell, HPE, and Lenovo.
Moreover, one of Supermicro’s largest clients, CoreWeave, is transitioning to become a cloud computing service provider specializing in GPU-accelerated computing.
This shift has increased demand for GPU-accelerated computing and liquid cooling solutions. Reportedly, it’s believed that Gigabyte, which holds orders from CoreWeave, could be one of the biggest beneficiaries of the upcoming order shift.
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(Photo credit: Supermicro)
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In late March, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang personally delivered the first high-end DGX H200 AI server to customer OpenAI. According to a report from Commercial Times, following this, the upstream chips for the H200 AI-GPU entered mass production in late Q2, with large-scale deliveries expected from Q3 onwards.
Downstream companies, including Inventec, Quanta (QCT), Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), Supermicro, and Lenovo, have reportedly listed the H200 products as ready for shipment, with deliveries anticipated to begin in the second half of the year.
The same report, citing sources, indicates that current pending orders are still largely focused on the H100 in the HGX architecture, with the H200’s share remaining limited. The H200 shipments expected in Q3 will primarily be NVIDIA’s DGX H200. As for the B100, there is already some visibility, with shipments expected in the first half of next year.
Despite the CoWoS production capacity catching up and a significant easing in the supply of AI GPUs, due to the allocation system, the delivery time for the main H100 GPU shipments from various end-system partners can still reach up to 20 weeks.
However, major Taiwanese manufacturers such as Quanta, Inventec, Wistron, Gigabyte, and ASUS have seen a substantial boost in their overall server operations, driven by AI server business in the first half of the year. They are reportedly optimistic about AI server shipments in the second half of the year, expecting strong demand to continue, making the server business effectively free from any off-season throughout the year.
Among them, Wistron holds a significant advantage in the production and supply of H100 series substrates and the subsequent B100 series GPU modules and substrates. Starting from the second quarter, Wistron’s AI server-related business has shown high visibility, providing strong support for its overall operations.
On the other hand, the H20 series, an AI chip tailored for China due to U.S. chip restrictions, has also seen demand in the Chinese market. As NVIDIA recently secured a rush order for the H20 series, Taiwanese companies, including Wistron and Inventec, are expected to benefit.
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(Photo credit: NVIDIA)
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Following NVIDIA’s launch of the new computing platform GB200, as per a report from Commerical Times, Taiwanese supply chain players including Quanta, Pegatron, Wiwynn, Wistron, Gigabyte, and Foxconn’s subsidiary Ingrasys have showcased their solutions and related cooling technologies based on the GB200 at the latest GTC conference, aiming to capture opportunities in the next-generation AI server market.
Quanta Cloud Technology (QCT), a subsidiary of Quanta Computer, demonstrated its systems and AI applications based on the NVIDIA MGX architecture, announcing support for the upcoming NVIDIA GB200 superchip and NVIDIA GB200 NVL72.
QCT showcased their NVIDIA MGX architecture systems, featuring the NVIDIA GH200 chip, employing a modular reference design. System manufacturers can utilize the NVIDIA MGX architecture to tailor models suitable for applications like generative AI, high-performance computing (HPC), and edge deployments.
Pegatron, on the other hand, has become one of NVIDIA’s global partners in advanced GPU computing technology, particularly with the latest NVIDIA GB200 chip. Reportedly, Pegatron is actively developing the GB200 NVL36, designed as a multi-node, liquid-cooled, rack-level platform dedicated to processing compute-intensive workloads. Equipped with the NVIDIA BlueField-3 data processing unit, it enables network acceleration in ultra-scale AI cloud environments and fulfills various GPU computing functionalities.
GIGABYTE, a key supplier of high-end AI GPU servers for NVIDIA last year, showcased their latest offerings at this year’s GTC exhibition. Their subsidiary, GIGABYTE Technology, unveiled the GIGABYTE XH23-VG0, a 2U server featuring the NVIDIA H100 GPU and GH200 architecture, capable of transferring data at speeds of up to 900GB per second. Additionally, they announced the readiness of their product line for the next-generation Blackwell platform, including HGX boards, superchips, and PCIe expansion cards, which will be released gradually over the coming months.
Meanwhile, Wiwynn, included in the first wave of suppliers for the NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 system, showcased its latest AI server cabinet solution based on the NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 at the GTC exhibition. They also presented their newest comprehensive liquid-cooled management system, the UMS100.
Ingrasys also showcased a range of innovations at the exhibition, including NVIDIA MGX architecture servers and the GB200 NVL72 solution. They also demonstrated advanced liquid cooling technologies such as the liquid-to-gas Sidecar technology and liquid-to-liquid Cooling Distribution Unit (CDU).
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(Photo credit: NVIDIA)
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GIGABYTE held an online earning call on November 1st, during which General Manager Etay Lee expressed optimism about the company’s performance. The growth momentum in server and motherboard sectors remains robust, allowing GIGABYTE to potentially reach the significant milestone of NT$100 billion in annual revenue ahead of schedule. Additionally, the company is increasing its server revenue contribution this year, aiming for a remarkable double-digit growth.
As reported by Anue, Lee focused on the server sector, noting that the third quarter demonstrated impressive server revenue, and this momentum is expected to continue into the fourth quarter. The company is poised for high double-digit revenue growth in the server sector this year, with the ambition to challenge triple-digit growth. These developments have led to an upward revision of the annual revenue target.
Etay Lee emphasized the current high demand for AI servers, with a majority being shipped as units or racks. These include high quality networking, high efficiency storage, and High Performance Computing (HPC) integration. The increased components in AI server systems has led to a boost in revenue and gross profit; however, there is a slight decrease in the gross profit margin.
Regarding the expanded chip ban controls imposed by the United States, Lee clarified that GIGABYTE’s AI server products have a limited presence in the Chinese market, thereby minimizing the impact of these restrictions. Furthermore, in regions such as the Middle East and Vietnam where approvals are required, the company will also submit applications, and the overall impact is minimal.
In terms of graphics cards, GIGABYTE reported that inventory adjustments are completed, and channels have returned to normal levels. This, coupled with competitive pricing for the company’s main products, the 4060Ti and 4070, has generated strong demand starting from late in the third quarter. Notably, the European and American regions have witnessed a resurgence in growth, with demand surpassing that of the Asia-Pacific region.
(Image: GIGABYTE)