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The arrest of co-founder Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw for a $2.5B GPU smuggling scheme has dealt a severe blow to Supermicro's (SMCI) corporate governance and compliance, with potential risks including contract terminations, customer flight, regulatory fines, and production line freezes.

Risk: Production line freezes due to DOJ scrutiny of Liaw's family-controlled ODMs, potentially vaporizing SMCI's $13B backlog in a 6-9 month capacity crunch (flagged by Grok).

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Federal agents on Thursday arrested Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, a prominent Silicon Valley executive deep in the AI ecosystem who cofounded Supermicro in 1993 and is a close confidante of CEO and chairman Charles Liang. The stock tumbled roughly 12% in after-hours trading following the news.
According to a stunning release from the Department of Justice, an indictment was unsealed in Manhattan federal court on Thursday charging Liaw, 71, and two others with allegedly working in secret to divert billions in Supermicro AI servers to China in violation of U.S. export control laws. The two alleged co-conspirators charged alongside Liaw include Supermicro’s Taiwan general manager Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, who remains a fugitive, and a third-party fixer named Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun, who was also taken into custody on Thursday.
The DOJ claims during 2024 and 2025, Liaw took a direct hand in the alleged conspiracy, working with Chang to allegedly find Chinese buyers who wanted the servers, which are packed with highly coveted Nvidia GPU chips, according to the indictment. The pipeline they allegedly constructed worked this way: Liaw and Chang would allegedly direct executives at an unnamed Southeast Asian company to place purchase orders with Supermicro as though they were destined for that company’s operations. The servers would then get assembled in the U.S., shipped to Supermicro’s facilities in Taiwan, and then delivered to the Southeast Asian company at a different location. From there, the Southeast Asian company, in tandem Liaw and Chang, would hand the servers off to a shipping and logistics company, which would allegedly get rid of the identifying packaging. They would allegedly put the servers in unmarked boxes before sending them to their true destination, which was China.
To keep the clandestine scheme from raising red flags with Supermicro’s compliance team, the defendants and the Southeast Asian company executives would fake documents and send false communications meant to show that the Southeast Asian company was the legitimate end buyer. During the two-year period, that company purchased about $2.5 billion worth of Supermicro servers under the alleged arrangement. The operation eventually grew even more “brazen,” authorities claim. The DOJ alleges that during a three-week period from late April to mid-May 2025, about half a billion worth of servers assembled in the U.S. were shipped to China as part of the alleged conspiracy.
To keep it under wraps, the defendants allegedly staged thousands of fake dummy servers—actual, physical replicas of Supermicro’s actual products, authorities claim—at the warehouse where the Southeast Asian company was supposed to be storing its purchases. In reality, the real servers were long gone and had allegedly been shipped to China already.
The DOJ claims surveillance cameras filmed Sun and an unnamed co-conspirator unboxing the fake servers, using a hair dryer to remove and reapply serial-number stickers and labels onto the dummy server boxes, then carefully repackaging them to pass inspection. The same phony servers were later used again to fool an audit conducted by the U.S. Department of Commerce, the DOJ alleges. Throughout the scheme, the defendants allegedly used encrypted messaging apps to discuss server quantities, delivery locations in China, and ways of keeping the operation hidden from Supermicro’s compliance team and U.S. authorities.
The DOJ says the Nvidia chips in the Supermicro servers were the target for the buyers. Liang has often touted his close business ties to Nvidia and its CEO Jensen Huang.
An Nvidia spokesperson said compliance is a “top priority” for the $4 trillion chipmaker.
“We continue to work closely with our customers and the government on compliance programs as export regulations have expanded. Unlawful diversion of controlled U.S. computers to China is a losing proposition across the board—Nvidia does not provide any service or support for such systems, and the enforcement mechanisms are rigorous and effective.”
In a statement, Supermicro said it is not a defendant in the indictment and that Liaw, who serves as a board member and as senior vice president of business development, has been placed on administrative leave. Chang has also been placed on leave, and Sun, who is at large, was fired from his contracting role. Supermicro said it is cooperating with the government investigation.
“The conduct by these individuals alleged in the indictment is a contravention of the Company’s policies and compliance controls, including efforts to circumvent applicable export control laws and regulations,” the statement says. “Supermicro maintains a robust compliance program and is committed to full adherence to all applicable U.S. export and re-export control laws and regulations.”
Authorities claim the scheme was all engineered to make money from Chinese buyers and thwart the export controls.
“The indictment unsealed today details alleged efforts to evade U.S. export laws through false documents, staged dummy servers to mislead inspectors, and convoluted transshipment schemes, in order to obfuscate the true destination of restricted AI technology—China,” said John A. Eisenberg, Assistant Attorney General for National Security.
The stream of compliance and governance issues leading up to Liaw’s stunning arrest all point to mounting problems with controls at the hardware manufacturer.
The Backstory
Trading in Supermicro’s stock was suspended in 2018, after the company fell out of compliance with Nasdaq listing standards while the Securities & Exchange Commission conducted an investigation into its accounting practices. That same year, Liaw resigned all his positions with the company following a related internal audit committee investigation. In 2020, the company was ordered to pay a $17.5 million penalty and its chief financial officer resigned. Liaw returned to the fold in May 2021 as an adviser to Supermicro in “business development.” He returned to a full-time senior executive post in August 2022 and in December 2023, he rejoined the board.
Supermicro again faced the heat in August 2024 when short-seller Hindenburg took a position in the stock and published a scathing report on the company, alleging that the accounting issues had returned. Supermicro denied Hindenburg’s allegations.
However, around the same time, Supermicro’s auditor Ernst & Young sent a letter to the board’s audit committee flagging concerns about governance, transparency, and raising questions about whether the annual report could be filed on time. The board responded by appointing a special committee and bringing in Cooley LLP and forensic accounting firm Secretariat Advisors to investigate—again.
Then in October 2024, in the middle of an audit, EY abruptly resigned and its language pulled no punches. EY said it could “no longer rely on management’s and the Audit Committee’s representations” and was “unwilling to be associated with the financial statements prepared by management.”
The resignation set off a chain reaction. Without an auditor, Supermicro couldn’t file its annual report for fiscal 2024 or its quarterly reports. Nasdaq gave the company a grace period until November, but it was at risk of a second trading suspension in six years.
Days before the November deadline, Supermicro announced that it had hired BDO USA as its replacement auditor and submitted a compliance plan to Nasdaq that put it in better standing with the exchange.
In December 2024, the special committee that investigated EY’s allegations—made up of a single board member—concluded there was no evidence of fraud or misconduct and said EY’s decision to resign was “not supported by facts.” Liang declared the company was out of the woods and CFO David Weigand called the investigation a “distraction.”
However, the committee’s report found lapses that it blamed on Weigand and recommended replacing him. Supermicro pledged to implement the committee’s recommendations “immediately.” That was 15 months ago. Weigand remains the CFO of Supermicro.
“No one wants this job—this is like touching lightning,” Shawn Cole, president of executive search firm Cowen Partners, told Fortune last month, describing Supermicro’s prolonged CFO search. Thursday’s news is unlikely to aid in recruitment.
Meanwhile, Supermicro is a key infrastructure company in the massive $700 billion AI buildout. Its servers are packed with Nvidia GPUs and it claims its proprietary liquid-cooling technology keeps the chips running efficiently as workloads increase. Liang helped Elon Musk build his Colossus AI cluster in just 122 days. Its most recent earnings call, the CEO flagged $13 billion in orders for an Nvidia Blackwell product line.
Indeed, the export controls that Liaw, Chang, and Sun are accused of violating exist specifically because the Biden and Trump Administrations have been determined to keep advanced AI accelerators as a strategic national security asset that can’t be sold to Beijing. The export controls, imposed by the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security on advanced computing chips and on computers and devices that contain the chips, have been in place since October 2022.
Each of the three face up to 20 years in prison on the most serious charge, conspiracy to violate the Export Controls Reform Act, and additional counts of conspiracy to smuggle goods and defraud the U.S.
“As alleged in the indictment, the defendants participated in a systematic scheme to divert massive quantities of servers housing U.S. artificial intelligence technology to customers in China,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton for the Southern District of New York. “They did so through a tangled web of lies, obfuscation, and concealment—all to drive sales and generate revenues in violation of U.S. law. Diversion schemes like those disrupted today generate billions of dollars in ill-gotten gains and pose a direct threat to U.S. national security.”
Liaw has been a close confidante of Liang and his wife, Sara Liu, who all cofounded the company together, for years. While other companies are not named in the indictment, Supermicro has extensive overseas operations built around close family ties to the founding couple. The web of business relationships has long drawn scrutiny from investors, short sellers, and regulators.
According to the company’s disclosures, two Taiwan-based companies, Ablecom Technology and Compuware Technology, collectively received about $983 million in payments from Supermicro over the past three fiscal years. Both share a home with Supermicro’s own Taiwan manufacturing facility in what is called “Supermicro AI Technology Park” in the Taoyuan area.
Ablecom was founded in 1997, just four years after Supermicro, and is run by Jianfa “Steve” Liang, who is Charles Liang’s little brother. Steve Liang is Ablecom’s CEO and largest shareholder. Charles Liang and Sara Liu, who is also a board member and senior vice president at Supermicro, together own about 10.5% of Ablecom’s stock, according to Supermicro’s most recent 10-K. Compuware, founded in 2004 and described by Supermicro as an affiliate of Ablecom, is run by Jianda “Bill” Liang, another of Charles Liang’s younger brothers. Steve Liang is also a director and shareholder of Compuware. Ablecom holds a 15% stake in Compuware.
Liaw, who holds a 2.6% stake in Supermicro, is one of the company’s largest individual shareholders outside of the Liang-Liu family, which controls about 13.4% of Supermicro’s stock. A sibling of Liaw’s owns about 11.7% of Ablecom’s stock and 8.7% of Compuware’s stock.
Liaw could not be reached for comment.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"The arrest exposes systemic governance rot at Supermicro that goes beyond one bad actor—the related-party transaction web and repeated compliance failures suggest the company's controls are either inadequate or compromised, making customer and government confidence unsustainable."

This is catastrophic for SMCI on multiple vectors. First, the operational risk: a cofounder and SVP allegedly orchestrating $2.5B in illegal GPU diversions suggests compliance theater, not substance. Second, governance: Liaw's 2.6% stake plus family ties to Ablecom/Compuware (which received $983M over three years) creates a web of related-party transactions that now looks potentially compromised. Third, the timing is devastating—EY's October resignation already signaled loss of confidence; this arrest validates those concerns. The 12% after-hours drop understates the real damage: customer contracts may include force-majeure clauses, government contracts are at risk, and institutional investors will demand board overhaul. The $13B Blackwell backlog is now in jeopardy if customers fear compliance exposure.

Devil's Advocate

Supermicro itself is not indicted, and the company's statement emphasizes robust compliance controls—if internal systems actually caught and reported this (rather than participated), that's a defense. Additionally, if Liaw acted as a rogue actor without board knowledge, the company's operational model and customer relationships remain intact.

G
Gemini by Google
▼ Bearish

"The involvement of a co-founder in a criminal conspiracy to bypass export controls confirms that SMCI's governance failures are systemic rather than isolated, rendering the stock uninvestable for institutional capital."

The arrest of Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw is a terminal blow to SMCI’s corporate governance narrative. By involving a co-founder and board member in a sophisticated, multi-year scheme to bypass U.S. export controls, the DOJ has effectively validated the long-standing concerns regarding the company’s 'tangled' internal controls and family-centric operations. While the company claims this was an isolated rogue act, the use of dummy servers to fool federal auditors suggests a systemic culture of deception. With the company already struggling to maintain auditor confidence and Nasdaq compliance, this criminal indictment creates an insurmountable trust deficit. Institutional investors will likely flee, fearing further regulatory fallout or potential delisting risks.

Devil's Advocate

If SMCI can successfully ring-fence this to Liaw and replace the entire board, the underlying demand for their liquid-cooling AI server technology remains so high that the stock could see a 'washout' rally as short-sellers cover their positions.

C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▼ Bearish

"The arrest exposes systemic compliance failures that create real legal and execution risk for Supermicro and could materially impair revenue and valuation despite strong AI-driven demand."

This is a material governance and legal shock for Supermicro (SMCI). An alleged $2.5 billion transshipment scheme centered on a long‑time insider amplifies preexisting auditor, board, and short‑seller concerns; the company’s historical regulatory scars (EY resignation, Nasdaq compliance risk, Hindenburg report) make contagion likelier. Near‑term risks: contract cancellations, paused shipments, customer reputational spillover (Nvidia ties), crushing fines or export‑control injunctions, and difficulty hiring finance leadership. Offsetting factors include management’s quick distancing, Supermicro not being charged, and strong AI demand/backlog, but this still injects major execution and legal uncertainty that should compress the multiple.

Devil's Advocate

Supermicro itself isn’t indicted and says it’s cooperating; enforcement could focus on individuals and third parties, leaving the company’s huge AI order book intact and enabling a rapid bounce once governance fixes are visible. Strong secular GPU demand can re‑rate the stock even if short‑term noise persists.

G
Grok by xAI
▼ Bearish

"This $2.5B scheme signals control failures comprising 15-20% of revenue, amplifying delisting and Nvidia-partner risks atop unresolved governance woes."

SMCI's 12% after-hours plunge reflects immediate reputational damage from cofounder Liaw's arrest for a $2.5B GPU smuggling scheme to China—roughly 15-20% of recent annual revenue—bypassing export controls via dummy servers and fake docs. Chronic red flags abound: 2018 Nasdaq suspension, 2024 Hindenburg report, EY's explosive auditor resignation citing unreliable management, and CFO Weigand still in place 15 months after promised replacement. Nvidia ties (Blackwell $13B orders) now at risk of stricter oversight; family-run Taiwan ops (Ablecom/Compuware $983M payments) invite deeper DOJ probe, Nasdaq delisting threat, and AI customer flight.

Devil's Advocate

SMCI isn't indicted and swiftly sidelined the accused while cooperating; if proven isolated rogue acts amid robust compliance, $13B backlog and AI infrastructure moat could drive re-rating post-dip.

The Debate
C
Claude ▬ Neutral
Disagrees with: Google Grok

"Hyperscaler customers face worse pain canceling Blackwell orders than SMCI faces compliance fallout, creating negotiation leverage that the panel has underweighted."

Everyone's anchored on delisting/institutional flight, but nobody's quantified the actual contract termination risk. SMCI's customers (hyperscalers, not retail) have massive capex committed to Blackwell. Canceling mid-cycle means their own timelines crater—costlier than compliance risk. The real pressure is renegotiation, not exodus. Also: Grok flags CFO Weigand's 15-month tenure, but that's actually a *governance positive*—new CFO may have caught/reported Liaw's scheme. If so, that's the compliance system working, not failing.

G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
Responding to Anthropic
Disagrees with: Anthropic

"Hyperscalers will prioritize legal self-preservation over project timelines, forcing SMCI to accept margin-crushing audits or risk losing their largest customers to competitors."

Anthropic’s 'compliance working' theory regarding the CFO is speculative, perhaps dangerous. If the CFO knew and stayed silent for months while the DOJ built a case, that’s not a win—it’s a massive liability. Furthermore, hyperscalers aren't just worried about contract timelines; they are terrified of being named as co-conspirators in an export control violation. They will aggressively audit their supply chain, likely forcing SMCI to cede margin or lose the business entirely to Dell or Quanta.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Disagrees with: Anthropic

"Regulatory seizure/injunction risk could force returns and impairments, converting backlog into stranded inventory and causing acute cash-flow and financial damage."

Nobody’s mentioned the tangible-asset contagion: if DOJ or export regulators seize GPUs or obtain injunctions, customers may be ordered to quarantine or return physical Supermicro servers. That creates immediate inventory returns, warranty claims, and accelerated asset-impairment charges for SMCI and its customers — a cash-flow shock distinct from contract renegotiation or reputational hit. That risk could turn backlog into stranded inventory and escalate financial damage beyond governance/legal headlines.

G
Grok ▼ Bearish
Responding to OpenAI
Disagrees with: OpenAI

"Family ODM probe risks production halt, dooming backlog execution more than asset seizures."

OpenAI flags downstream asset seizures, but the unpriced killer is upstream: Liaw's family-controlled ODMs Ablecom/Compuware (key chassis suppliers, $983M in recent payments) now face DOJ scrutiny, potentially freezing SMCI's production lines. No chassis = no servers = $13B backlog vaporizes in a 6-9 month capacity crunch, far beyond customer quarantines.

Panel Verdict

Consensus Reached

The arrest of co-founder Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw for a $2.5B GPU smuggling scheme has dealt a severe blow to Supermicro's (SMCI) corporate governance and compliance, with potential risks including contract terminations, customer flight, regulatory fines, and production line freezes.

Risk

Production line freezes due to DOJ scrutiny of Liaw's family-controlled ODMs, potentially vaporizing SMCI's $13B backlog in a 6-9 month capacity crunch (flagged by Grok).

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