Super Micro Computer vs. Lumen Technologies: Wall Street Says to Sell One of These AI Stocks and Hold the Other

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The excitement behind artificial intelligence has driven the market to all-time highs. Any company that can tie its business to the future of artificial intelligence has seemingly done well, promising huge demand for its products or services from a new and untapped market.

But as valuations have soared, the short sellers have moved in, trying to find stocks that can’t live up to the promise or hype. Short sellers have honed in on the computer server and cloud provider Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) and the telecommunications company Lumen Technologies (NYSE: LUMN). Wall Street analysts are telling investors to sell one and hold the other. Let’s take a look.

Lumen Technologies runs one of the largest interconnected fiber-optic cable companies, which powers high-speed internet, cable television, and phone services for consumers and businesses. Lumen’s stock has shot up about 250% this year, largely due to the belief that its fiber-optic network will serve as critical infrastructure in connecting data centers needed to power artificial intelligence. Lumen in August reported that demand for AI has led to $5 billion of new business.

However, short sellers like Kerrisdale Capital have started to doubt the company’s valuation and how much it can truly benefit from the AI boom. In late August, Kerrisdale, in a short report, suggested that buying into the AI hype around Lumen is premature and that the $5 billion of new business is “a desperate bid to raise cash amid deteriorating revenues and growing liquidity concerns.” Furthermore, Kerrisdale states that Lumen’s future sales opportunities do not include leading tech firms that are leveraging AI but are to older, more antiquated businesses still in discovery mode when it comes to AI.

Wall Street seems to agree with Kerrisdale. Of the eight analysts cited by TipRanks, zero are telling investors to buy the stock; there are five holds and three sell ratings. On Wall Street, this might as well be a sell rating. The average analyst price target is $4.09, which implies about 38% downside. I suspect some of these hold ratings are from firms that may have a business relationship with Lumen or want to keep the possibility open.

Lumen also has a high debt of close to $20 billion. While the company is trying to engineer a turnaround, given the stock’s big run and questions surrounding its role in AI, I would also avoid the stock until the company provides more evidence of sales related to AI.

The computer server and storage maker Super Micro Computer is the most shorted stock in the S&P 500 (as of Oct. 21), with more than 21% of the company’s outstanding float sold short. The company has also benefited tremendously from AI because investors believe its products can be used as key infrastructure to store data that powers AI and machine learning. The stock has ripped 68% this year.

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