Super Micro Computer co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw appeared in a Manhattan federal court Wednesday and pleaded not guilty to charges tied to an alleged $2.5 billion smuggling scheme involving Nvidia-powered servers.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
Federal prosecutors say Liaw helped route U.S.-assembled servers containing Nvidia chips to customers in China, in violation of U.S. export controls on advanced AI hardware.
The alleged method? A Southeast Asian pass-through company used to obscure the final destination of the shipments.
Two others connected to Super Micro were also charged. Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, a general manager in Super Micro’s Taiwan office, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun, described by prosecutors as a “fixer” who helped coordinate the diversions.
Sun also pleaded not guilty at Wednesday’s hearing. Chang is not currently in custody.
U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos set a trial date of November 2. The case now moves into a pre-trial phase, which typically involves evidence review and legal motions from both sides.
Liaw has been released on a $5 million bond. He has also stepped down from Super Micro’s board following the charges.
SMCI stock took a 27% hit when the charges were first made public on March 19. The stock has not recovered that ground.
Year-to-date, SMCI is down 23.1%. The November trial date means this legal overhang is not going away anytime soon.
Analyst sentiment on the stock is cautious. On TipRanks, SMCI carries a Hold consensus rating, based on three Buy ratings, eight Holds, and three Sells.
The average price target sits at $31.70, which would represent roughly 41% upside from current levels — though that gap reflects how far the stock has fallen, not a surge in confidence.
The core of the prosecution’s case is that Liaw and the others deliberately structured the server shipments to avoid triggering U.S. export restrictions.
Advanced AI chips, particularly those made by Nvidia, are tightly controlled under U.S. law when it comes to exports to China.
Prosecutors allege the group sold the hardware to an unnamed Southeast Asian entity, which then forwarded the equipment to Chinese end-users.
This is the highest-profile case to date involving alleged smuggling of restricted AI hardware to China.
The charges were first unsealed on March 19, and Wednesday’s not guilty pleas mark the formal start of the legal process.
The next key date is November 2, when the trial is scheduled to begin.
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