30 KiB
Bear Analyst: Short answer / recommendation
- Sell or materially trim now. This is an event‑driven, high‑uncertainty situation—not a tactical “buy the dip.” The indictment + governance shock, enormous one‑day volume spike, fractured technical structure, and fragile cash conversion create a multi‑dimensional downside case. If you must keep exposure, hedge immediately (buy puts) and shrink position size to a small, defined slug while you wait for objective de‑risking.
Why I’m bearish (compact evidence pack)
- Legal/regulatory event is existential: DOJ indictment alleging diversion of Nvidia‑powered servers to China is a criminal, export‑control issue. That can lead to fines, export restrictions, supplier/customer distancing, and multi‑quarter legal drag. The company lost a co‑founder from the board immediately — governance failure is material.
- Market reaction was drastic and unequivocal:
- Close 3/20 = $20.53, volume = 242,958,521 (vs normal 20–80M). One‑day gap from ~$30.8 to $20.5 — massive, forced re‑pricing.
- VWMA ≈ $27.02, 10‑EMA ≈ $29.29, 50‑SMA ≈ $31.06, 200‑SMA ≈ $40.79 — price is well below every key moving average. This is a structural breakdown, not a minor pullback.
- Momentum/volatility: RSI ≈ 24 (oversold but can remain depressed), MACD ≈ -1.0036 (negative), ATR ≈ 2.30 (elevated).
- Fundamentals aren’t a safety net here:
- Q4 2025 revenue spike ($12.682B) looks impressive but cash flow did not follow: operating cash flow Q4 = -$23.9M; FCF Q4 = -$45.1M. Earnings are lumpy and working capital drove the cash shortfall.
- Working capital is enormous and fragile: inventory ≈ $10.6B and receivables ≈ $11.0B vs cash ≈ $4.09B. Those items absorb capital and become illiquidity risk if customers delay or contracts are disputed.
- Payables (~$13.75B) artificially boosted cash in Q4 — if payables normalize, the company will need real cash or financing to finance operations.
- Index/flow risk: S&P removal is plausible; forced rebalancing by ETFs could generate additional mechanical selling beyond fundamental selling.
- Competitors and customers respond fast: Large OEMs (Dell, HPE) and cloud providers prefer clear governance and predictable compliance. Customers with regulatory exposure will prefer suppliers without criminal investigations. SMCI is vulnerable to rapid market share loss if customers reassign orders.
- Legal timelines are long and binary: criminal cases and export‑control investigations can take months to years; adverse rulings or sanctions could permanently damage access to key components (Nvidia GPUs) or markets.
Direct rebuttals to the bull case (point‑by‑point) Bull: “This is panic — fundamentals and cash give time; forward P/E is cheap — opportunity.” Bear response:
- “Cheap” only matters if earnings and revenue sustain. Forward EPS assumes no material damage from the indictment. If DOJ cases lead to contract cancellations, export restrictions, Nvidia supply interruptions, or fines/reserves, forward EPS will be revised down — perhaps materially. The current forward P/E of ~6.9 is fragile, not a valuation floor.
- Cash ≈ $4.09B looks comforting until you factor in >$21B tied up in AR+Inventory and the reality that payables (used as a cash lever) can normalize quickly. Q4 OCF was negative despite record revenue — that’s not a cushion, it’s a warning light.
- The market is not necessarily “overpricing” worst case — the indictment opens paths to permanent impairment (lost contracts, export bans, debarment). Those outcomes would reduce earnings long term; the market is pricing some of that risk appropriately.
Bull: “Technical oversold signals create a buying opportunity.” Bear response:
- Oversold technicals are not a buy signal in the midst of a structural re‑rating and event risk. The gap + massive volume indicates not just retail panic but forced liquidation and a re‑pricing of future cash flows. RSI can stay depressed for long periods; MACD and VWMA show selling was volume‑supported, not a thin panic bounce.
Bull: “Working capital spike is cyclical and will convert back to cash.” Bear response:
- That’s an assumption, not a fact. Working capital conversion relies on customers paying and inventory turning. The indictment directly threatens both: customers could delay payments or cancel; inventory could become harder to sell if export controls/market access are impacted. Don’t assume normalization—demand visibility just decreased materially.
Bull: “Customers/hyperscalers will stick because SMCI is specialized in GPU-dense builds.” Bear response:
- Specialized builds matter only if customers accept counterparty regulatory risk. Large hyperscalers and governments value supply‑chain certainty and compliance above price. Contract inquiries and procurement policies will likely force customers to pause or reassign orders until legal clarity exists. Big OEMs with lower governance risk can capture that spend.
Probability tilt and realistic scenarios (revised, conservative)
- Bull baseline previously 40% — I’d reduce that materially. Realistic updated probabilities:
- Bear / severe impairment (legal penalties, lost customers, export limits): 30–40%
- Protracted uncertainty / choppy recovery (legal drags, partial customer loss, slower cash conversion): 40–45%
- Fast containment / limited corporate culpability and return to growth: 15–25%
- Put simply: downside probability and depth are higher than the bull assigns. The market has re‑rated expected future cash flows, and the uncertainty window is long.
Concrete trade plan (if you hold or manage exposure)
- If you hold shares
- SELL or materially trim now. Locking some losses and reducing exposure is the prudent move.
- If you insist on staying, immediately hedge remaining position with protective puts (near‑term expiries) sized to protect material holdings.
- For any residual, set a volatility‑aware stop: below the 3/20 intraday low (20.35) with a buffer — practical stop ~18.0–18.5 (20.35 − 1.0 ATR ≈ 18.05). Use small residual sizing only.
- If you don’t hold and are considering buying
- WAIT. Don’t buy into headline uncertainty. Only consider very small, hedged, speculative bets after objective de‑risking occurs (see triggers below) — not before.
- If you want to express a bearish trade
- Consider buying puts or shorting shares with tight risk controls (shorting a highly volatile, low‑liquidity post‑shock name is risky). Pair trade alternative: short SMCI / long DELL to reduce market beta, but be aware Dell can also be affected by broader export scrutiny.
- Position sizing guidance
- Keep any speculative exposure <1–2% of portfolio until legal/regulatory clarity. For hedged longs, limit to small tranches and buy protection.
Clear de‑risking triggers (what I’d need to see before reversing stance)
- Company 8‑K or DOJ filings that materially reduce corporate culpability (e.g., charges focusing on individuals only, no corporate indictment or operational prohibitions).
- Major customers publicly reaffirm continuing contracts and payments.
- Receivables and inventory normalize (DSO and DIO fall materially QoQ) and operating cash flow turns sustainably positive.
- Price recovers above VWMA (~27) with declining sell volume and MACD histogram turns positive for multiple sessions; ideally price closes back above 10‑EMA (~29.3) and then 50‑SMA (~31.06).
- Any S&P index committee statement that SMCI will remain in the index.
What I learned and how I’ll act differently (past mistakes & new protocol)
- Past mistakes I’ve made in similar events:
- Underestimating legal/regulatory tail risk and treating it like a temporary PR event.
- Relying too heavily on headline revenue spikes without validating cash conversion and customer stickiness.
- Being slow to hedge large exposures after a governance/legal shock.
- New discipline I’ll follow on names like SMCI:
- Treat legal/regulatory events as first‑order risks, not second‑order. They change the probability distribution of future cash flows and can permanently impair access to customers/suppliers.
- Cap initial exposure to tiny tranches (1–2%) and require mandatory hedges (puts/collars) until objective de‑risking is documented.
- Make cash conversion metrics (OCF, DSO, DIO) gating variables for add‑on purchases. Revenue alone is insufficient.
- Use pair trades to reduce market beta when expressing company‑specific directional views.
- Avoid relying on technical “oversold” signals as entry points during legal/regulatory re‑ratings — only add after structural validation.
Checklist for the next 30–90 days (monitor closely)
- DOJ filings/indictment developments and any corporate involvement escalation.
- SMCI 8‑Ks / SEC updates, especially legal reserves or cooperation details.
- Statements from major customers and Nvidia about supply/contract status.
- Index committee notices (S&P).
- AR / Inventory / OCF trends in the next quarter — if no improvement, downside remains likely.
- Volume and price action relative to VWMA, 10‑EMA, 50‑SMA for technical confirmation.
Bottom line (again, succinct)
- This is not a normal dip. The confluence of criminal indictment, governance breakdown, record one‑day liquidation volume, fragile cash conversion, and potential loss of customers or supplier access positions SMCI as a high‑probability, high‑impact downside risk. Sell or materially reduce exposure now; hedge any remaining exposure; only consider re‑entry after clear, objective evidence the legal and operational risk has been resolved or meaningfully contained. Bear Analyst: Bottom line up front: SELL / materially trim now. The indictment and board shock are not a short-lived headline — they change the probability distribution of future cash flows. Combine that with a massive volume gap, broken technical structure, fragile cash conversion, and plausible index‑flow and customer‑loss scenarios, and the safest course for most investors is to reduce exposure and hedge any remaining position immediately.
Why I’m strongly bearish (concise evidence pack)
- Legal/regulatory risk is existential and long‑tailed. The unsealed DOJ indictment alleges diversion of Nvidia‑powered servers to China — that’s criminal export‑control territory. Outcomes can include fines, export restrictions, blocked shipments, contract cancellations, or even debarment. These are multi‑quarter to multi‑year risks that directly threaten revenue and access to critical GPUs.
- Market re‑pricing was immediate and violent — indicative of structural repricing, not a garden‑variety pullback:
- 2026‑03‑20 close = $20.53 after a gap from ~$30.79; volume = 242,958,521 shares (normal daily vol ~20–80M). That’s forced/liquidation selling, not a routine dip.
- Price sits well below every trend marker: 10‑EMA ≈ 29.29, 50‑SMA ≈ 31.06, 200‑SMA ≈ 40.79, VWMA ≈ 27.02. MACD ≈ -1.0036, MACD‑hist ≈ -0.7829; RSI ≈ 24.07. Momentum and volume support the downside.
- Fundamentals aren’t a “safety net” here — they amplify risk:
- Q4 2025 revenue spike ($12.682B) looks impressive but cash didn’t follow: operating cash flow Q4 = -$23.9M; FCF Q4 = -$45.1M.
- Working capital is enormous and fragile: AR ≈ $11.0B + Inventory ≈ $10.6B = >$21.6B tied up vs Cash ≈ $4.09B. Payables (~$13.75B) masked cash use in Q4; if payables normalize, cash pressure will surface quickly.
- Gross margin is thin (Q4 ~6.3%) and operating margins are small — earnings are sensitive to customer/order disruption and price/BOM pressure.
- Index/flow and customer/concentration risks are real and immediate:
- S&P removal or large passive fund flows could force further mechanical selling.
- Major hyperscalers and regulated customers prioritize supply‑chain compliance. The indictment gives them a clear reason to pause or reassign orders to lower‑risk OEMs (Dell, HPE), accelerating revenue loss.
- Volatility and technicals make re‑entry timing uncertain:
- ATR ≈ $2.30 — expect multi‑dollar daily moves; RSI oversold can produce knee‑jerk bounces that trap buyers. VWMA above price indicates volume‑supported selling, not thin panic that will reverse quickly.
Direct rebuttals to the bull case — point by point Bull says: “This is a panic; fundamentals and cash give time; forward P/E is cheap — opportunity.”
- Bear counter:
- “Cheap” is meaningless if forward earnings are revised down materially. The forward EPS (≈2.97) and implied P/E ≈ 6.9 assume no material loss of customers, no export restrictions, and continued access to Nvidia GPUs —all of which the indictment threatens. If any of those occur, model revisions will crush the “cheap” multiple.
- The cash buffer (~$4B) looks comforting until you factor in >$21B tied up in AR+inventory and the possibility that customers delay payments or orders are cancelled. Q4 OCF negative despite record revenue is a red flag — revenue does not equal cash under current stress.
- Bull says: “Technicals are oversold — buyers should accumulate with hedges.”
- Bear counter:
- Oversold technicals don’t protect you from legal/regulatory re‑ratings. RSI can remain depressed for months during event‑driven re‑ratings; MACD and VWMA show volume‑backed selling. Buying into that without concrete de‑risking (legal, customer, OCF) is speculative.
- Bull says: “Working capital is cyclical and will convert back to cash.”
- Bear counter:
- That’s an optimistic assumption. The indictment directly threatens customers and shipments — the very counterparties that must pay AR or absorb inventory. Don’t treat cyclical working capital as automatic; treat it as conditional on customers and regulatory access.
- Bull says: “Customers will stick because SMCI is specialized and in high demand for AI servers.”
- Bear counter:
- Hyperscalers and large enterprise buyers prioritize regulatory certainty and compliance. When criminal export‑control issues arise, buyers can and will favor lower‑risk suppliers even at a price premium. Specialization helps only if customers are willing to accept the counterparty risk — and many won’t while DOJ cases remain open.
Probability tilt and plausible scenarios (conservative)
- Worst / bearish (30–40%): material penalties, export restrictions or large contract cancellations → prolonged revenue shock and multiple compression. Price could re-test single digits in an extreme case.
- Base / choppy (40–45%): protracted legal headlines, some customer delay, working capital normalizes slowly; stock drifts in low $20s with intermittent downspikes — extended period of high volatility and depressed valuation.
- Best / contained (15–25%): legal outcomes focus on individuals; customers reaffirm; OCF improves; valuation recovers. This is possible but not the base case given current indictment scope.
Concrete, actionable trade plan (I’m bearish — what to do) If you hold shares
- SELL or materially trim now. Lock gains/losses and reduce concentration to avoid being forced to hedge later at worse prices.
- Hedge any remainder immediately: buy protective puts (near‑term expiries) sized to your remaining exposure. Example: if you keep a small slice, buy puts that cap downside to absorb litigation tumults.
- Volatility‑aware stop (if you insist on holding): below the 3/20 intraday low (~20.35) with buffer: practical stop ≈ $18.00–$18.50 (20.35 − 1.0 ATR ≈ 18.05). That’s wide but reflects ATR ≈ 2.30 — set sizing so a stop hit is within your risk budget. If you don’t hold and are considering short exposure
- Shorting is possible but risky due to squeeze/mean‑reversion bounces. If shorting:
- Use tight stops (ATR based), size small, and consider pairing with a long in a large, low‑risk OEM (e.g., long DELL) to reduce market beta. If you don’t hold and are considering buying
- WAIT. Only consider very small, hedged, speculative positions after objective de‑risking triggers (see below). Do not buy solely because the stock is “cheap” or technically oversold. Position sizing
- Keep speculative exposure tiny: <1–2% of total portfolio until legal/regulatory clarity improves and OCF normalizes. Pair trade (recommended for relative exposure)
- Short SMCI / Long DELL (or another diversified OEM). This expresses conviction that customers will rotate to perceived lower‑risk suppliers while hedging broader market moves.
Clear de‑risking triggers I’d need to see before reversing the SELL stance
- Legal: DOJ filings or company disclosures that restrict charges to individuals and do not indicate systemic corporate complicity; or explicit evidence that the company is not a subject of corporate criminal prosecution.
- Customers: public confirmations from major hyperscalers/cloud customers that contracts remain intact and payments will continue.
- Cash conversion: OCF turns sustainably positive and AR/DIO decline materially QoQ (not just one‑off timing effects).
- Technical: price reclaims VWMA (~27) and 10‑EMA (~29.3) on declining sell volume, MACD crosses above 0, and RSI sustains >40; preferably, a sustained close above 50‑SMA (~31.06) before scaling in.
- Index: clear signal that S&P inclusion remains or index‑driven selling is over.
Competitive weaknesses and market structure that favor the bear case
- Customer concentration & procurement policies: hyperscalers can reassign large deals quickly to lower‑risk partners. SMCI’s large quarter showed it can execute, but it also exposes the company to order volatility and customer leverage.
- Thin margins + high BOM dependence: with Q4 gross margin ~6.3%, any pricing pressure, supply interruptions, or fines will compress profits quickly.
- Working‑capital dependency: SMCI’s business model ties up massive capital during order waves. That’s fine in normal times, but under legal/regulatory scrutiny it becomes a liability.
- Competitors’ advantage: larger OEMs (Dell, HPE) have deeper governance infrastructures and less reputational risk; customers and index managers may favor them during regulatory shock.
Lessons learned and how I’ll act differently (honest reflection)
- Past mistakes I’ve seen (and made): treating legal/regulatory events as short blips and failing to hedge early; over-relying on “buy the oversold dip” heuristics without gating on operational indicators; ignoring working‑capital mechanics when revenue looked strong.
- New discipline I will follow now:
- Treat legal/regulatory shocks as first‑order risks that can permanently change cash flows and customer access.
- Cap initial exposure to tiny tranches (1–2%) if I choose to speculate, and mandate option‑based hedges (puts or collars) until legal/customer clarity arrives.
- Use working‑capital metrics (OCF, DSO/DIO/DPO) as gating variables for any add‑on buys — revenue alone won’t suffice.
- Prefer pair trades to reduce market beta when expressing company‑specific bets.
- Monitor DOJ filings and 8‑Ks as daily primary indicators; integrate formal trigger rules (not “gut feel”) before increasing exposure.
Practical next steps I recommend for you right now
- If you hold material exposure: SELL/trim now and hedge remainder with protective puts sized to your desired downside tolerance.
- If you’re a trader: don’t try to catch a falling knife; if shorting, trim quickly and keep tight risk controls. Consider pair trades to limit market risk.
- If you’re a contrarian buyer: only consider tiny, hedged exposure and only after the triggers listed above begin to clear. Treat any near‑term bounce as a scalp, not a durable reversal.
If you want, I’ll:
- Build a specific hedge (put strikes/expiries) sized to your position and risk tolerance, or
- Monitor the exact de‑risking triggers (DOJ filings, 8‑Ks, customer statements, OCF/DSO data) and alert you the moment one of them clears.
Final word: this is not a routine “buy the dip” situation. It’s a governance + criminal export‑control event layered on top of a capital‑intensive, thin‑margin hardware business that just saw a dramatic, volume‑supported re‑rating. Sell or materially reduce exposure now; hedge any remainder; only re‑enter on objective, multi‑vector de‑risking. Bear Analyst: TL;DR — Bottom line: SELL / trim now. This isn’t a garden‑variety dip you “buy the oversold” into — it’s an event‑driven re‑pricing that changed the odds on future cash flows. The DOJ indictment, governance shock, massive one‑day liquidation and fragile working‑capital dynamics create a high probability of further downside and prolonged volatility. If you keep any exposure, hedge immediately and size tiny.
Immediate recommendation
- If you hold shares: materially trim or exit now. Hedge any remainder with puts sized to your exposure.
- If you don’t hold: do not initiate long positions. Wait for multi‑vector de‑risking (legal, customer, cash flow, and technical confirmation).
- If you want to express a bearish view: consider short or buy puts, or short SMCI / long DELL (pair trade) to reduce market beta. Use tight stops and small size.
Why I’m strongly bearish — the five pillars
- Legal / regulatory risk is first‑order and long‑tailed
- The indictment alleges smuggling of Nvidia‑powered AI servers to China — this hits export‑control, criminal, and trade‑compliance risk simultaneously. Outcomes include fines, export restrictions, customer cancellations, supplier cutoffs, or debarment — all of which directly remove revenue, not merely depress stock sentiment.
- This risk is binary and time‑extended. Criminal/export investigations play out over months/years; uncertainty persists and can permanently impair access to Nvidia GPUs (SMCI’s core product drivers).
- Market reaction was not just panic — it was structural re‑pricing
- 2026‑03‑20: close $20.53 after a ~$10+ gap from $30.79 on volume 242,958,521 vs normal 20–80M. That is forced/liquidation selling and a structural reset of expectations.
- Technicals: price << VWMA (27.02) << 10‑EMA (29.29) << 50‑SMA (31.06) << 200‑SMA (40.79). MACD ≈ −1.00; MACD‑hist ≈ −0.78; RSI ≈ 24 (oversold). Oversold doesn’t equal safe — RSI can stay depressed through a protracted re‑rating.
- Volume‑weighted price (VWMA) above current price shows the sell‑off was volume‑supported — not a shallow retail panic.
- Cash conversion & working capital are fragile — the “profit cushion” is illusionary
- Q4 2025 showed revenue spike ($12.682B) but operating cash flow was negative (OCF Q4 = −$23.9M; FCF Q4 = −$45.1M).
- AR ≈ $11.0B + Inventory ≈ $10.6B = >$21.6B tied up vs Cash ≈ $4.09B. Payables (~$13.75B) masked cash consumption in Q4 — if payables normalize, the cash tailwind evaporates and funding needs jump.
- Forward EPS and low P/E are only meaningful if customers pay and orders persist. The indictment directly threatens both — so forward earnings are highly conditional, not a reliable “cheap” read.
- Index/flow & customer behavior can amplify and prolong weakness
- S&P reweighting / forced ETF selling is plausible and mechanically creates another wave of selling. That is a near‑term flow shock that can amplify price declines.
- Hyperscalers and regulated enterprises value compliance and supply‑chain certainty. The indictment gives these customers a valid reason to pause or reassign orders to lower‑risk OEMs (Dell, HPE), accelerating revenue loss.
- Competitive vulnerability and margin structure
- SMCI operates in a thin‑margin, BOM‑sensitive business (Q4 gross margin ~6.3%). Margins and earnings are easily eroded by lost volumes, fines, or supply disruptions.
- Larger OEMs have stronger governance, deeper supplier relationships, and less reputational risk — they are natural recipients of reallocated business in a compliance‑conscious environment.
Countering the bull arguments — point‑by‑point
Bull: “This is panic; fundamentals and cash give time — cheap forward P/E makes this an asymmetric buy.” Bear reply:
- “Cheap” is only meaningful if forward EPS is realistic. The forward EPS (~2.97) assumes continued access to GPUs, intact customer relationships, and no material sanctions or fines. The indictment threatens precisely those assumptions. If even a portion of revenue is lost or shipments restricted, forward EPS collapses and the “cheap” multiple vanishes.
- Cash ≈ $4B sounds comfortable until you account for the >$21B of AR+inventory that must convert. If customers delay payments or cancel (likely given the indictment), that cash buffer shrinks fast. Payables normalization (the $12.75B bump that propped Q4 cash) could flip to a cash drain.
Bull: “Technicals are oversold — this is a buying window.” Bear reply:
- Oversold technicals do not counter fundamental regime change. The gap + volume indicates event‑driven repricing. RSI and MACD can remain extreme during long re‑ratings. Treat those signals as reasons to reduce size and require hedges, not as green lights to buy.
Bull: “Q4 revenue proves SMCI can win big orders; customers will stick.” Bear reply:
- Q4 showed execution capacity, but it also concentrated working capital and counterparty risk. The indictment creates an explicit path for customers to pause, reassess contracts, or shift vendors. Large hyperscalers will prioritize compliance and reputational safety — not necessarily the lowest price or fastest delivery.
Concrete downside scenarios (realistic probabilities)
- Severe (30–40%): corporate penalties, export restrictions, and substantial customer loss → deep multi‑quarter earnings erosion; possible multi‑quarter stock decline, with downside into single digits in extreme cases.
- Base (40–45%): protracted legal headlines, partial customer delays/reassignments, slow working‑cap normalization → stock languishes in low $20s, high volatility, multiple downward earnings revisions.
- Contained (15–25%): charges focus on individuals; company cooperation + customer re‑affirmations; working‑cap normalizes → recovery to mid/high $20s then higher. This is possible but not the most likely near‑term outcome.
Actionable trade plan (what to do now)
- If you hold shares:
- SELL or materially trim immediately to reduce concentration and lock in risk mitigation.
- Hedge any remaining exposure: buy near‑term puts sized to protect your residual holding. Example (illustrative): buy 1–3 month ATM or slightly OTM puts; or use collars if you want to retain limited upside.
- Use volatility‑aware stops for any kept exposure: practical stop ≈ $18.0–$18.5 (3/20 low ≈ $20.35 minus ~1 ATR ≈ 2.3). Size so that a stop hit equals your acceptable dollar loss.
- If you don’t hold:
- WAIT. Do not buy on oversold technicals. Consider only a tiny, hedged speculative position (<1% portfolio) or structured options if you’re willing to lose that piece.
- If you want to short:
- Shorting is possible but risky; prefer pair trades (short SMCI / long DELL or HPE) to capture vendor‑rotation thesis and reduce market beta. Keep tight stops and small size.
- Position sizing rule:
- Given high uncertainty, speculative exposure should be <1–2% of portfolio; hedged long exposure no more than 1–3% total until de‑risking occurs.
Specific de‑risking triggers I’d need to see before flipping constructive
- Legal: DOJ filings or company 8‑Ks that confine culpability to individuals and show no corporate operational prohibitions, or a clear remediation plan and independent compliance audit.
- Customers: one or more major hyperscalers publicly reaffirm material contracts and payment terms.
- Cash flow: OCF turns sustainably positive and AR + inventory days decline materially in the next quarter (not just payables timing).
- Technical: price reclaims VWMA (~27) and 10‑EMA (~29.3) on declining volume, MACD histogram rises toward zero and RSI sustains >40; ideally price closes above 50‑SMA (~31.06).
- Index: confirmation that S&P will not immediately remove SMCI (or the selling wave is complete).
Lessons learned — past mistakes and how I’ll act differently
- Mistake 1: Treating legal/regulatory shocks as temporary PR events. Lesson: these shocks change the probability distribution of future cash flows and can be permanent. Action: treat legal events as first‑order risk; require legal/customer evidence before adding.
- Mistake 2: Buying oversold names without hedges. Lesson: oversold technicals often precede prolonged drawdowns in event trades. Action: mandatory hedges (puts or collars) on any early exposure.
- Mistake 3: Ignoring working capital mechanics when revenue looked strong. Lesson: revenue without cash is not safety. Action: use OCF, DSO, DIO as gating metrics for scaling in.
- New discipline I’ll follow:
- Cap initial exposure to tiny tranches and hedge immediately.
- Make cash conversion (OCF + AR/DIO trends) and customer confirmations mandatory add triggers.
- Use pair trades to express directional views with reduced market beta.
- Monitor DOJ filings / 8‑Ks daily; treat legal docs as primary catalysts.
What to expect next (practical)
- High headline sensitivity: expect daily swings of multiple ATRs; news will move price more than fundamentals for weeks.
- Mechanical flows: be ready for index reweights and ETF selling to add transient pressure.
- If no quick legal clarity: price likely remains depressed; forced buyers/higher risk appetite will be needed to move it materially higher.
Concise checklist for you right now
- Are you long and it’s a material holding? → SELL/trim now; hedge remainder.
- Are you long and it’s a small exposure you can stomach? → Hedge immediately; set volatility‑aware stop around $18–18.5.
- Considering a new long? → WAIT for legal/customer/OCF triggers.
- Want to speculate? → Use options (buy puts to hedge longs or buy call spreads for cheap upside) and keep size sub‑1% of portfolio.
Final word The bull’s argument relies on a conditional “if customers stick and legal risk is contained” path. That conditional is exactly what the indictment threatens. Because the legal/regulatory vector is central to revenue and supply access, this is not a technical oversold trade — it’s a rerating of the business model’s risk profile. Take profits, cut exposure, hedge immediately, and don’t be seduced by oversold charts or headline math on forward EPS until objective, multi‑vector de‑risking is visible.