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AI’s Man in the Bowler Hat

AI’s Man in the Bowler Hat

Super Micro Falls Short of a Thomas Crown Twist

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The Coastal Journal
Nov 14, 2024
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AI’s Man in the Bowler Hat
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Like René Magritte’s The Son of Man, which inspired Pierce Brosnan’s approach to misdirection and deceit in the movie Thomas Crown Affair, the AI industry presents a sleek, enticing façade that challenges us to look deeper and question what’s really hidden beneath. In Magritte’s iconic painting, a faceless figure stands, his identity obscured by a green apple, while a bowler hat adds to the mystery, concealing vital clues about who he truly is.

This mysterious image draws us in, compelling us to look beyond the surface and uncover what’s being hidden by AI companies that once seemed to be as if profits go grow to the sky every quarter. Now, as the financial drama surrounding Super Micro Computer (SMCI) unravels, the AI stock market itself appears to be taking on the persona of The Son of Man: a composed figure, concealing secrets behind a glossy exterior. Investors are left in mystery, trying to determine if there is just one bowler hat hiding the truth—or if the entire industry is cloaked in a maze of deceits.

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The Thomas Crown Affair of AI

Super Micro Computer’s unraveling story feels straight out of The Thomas Crown Affair, where deception and illusion reign supreme. But for SMCI, the artful game of misdirection is failing, with its stock crashing nearly -90% from its high. In the movie’s iconic museum scene, a crowd of men in identical bowler hats throws authorities into chaos, each hat a decoy designed to confuse and obscure the real culprit. Super Micro and NVIDIA seem to be orchestrating a similar act, keeping investors at bay by inflating accounts receivable and using financial delays as diversions.

SMCI’s first “decoy” came in August 2024, when it delayed its 10-K report. Another just happened this past week (November 2024), with the company announcing it couldn’t publish its most recent 10-Q. This sequence of delays—like bowler-hatted men scrambling across a museum floor—has kept investors in a fog, each step dragging them further from the truth. Now, as they look for solid ground, the question remains: which companies are built on real value, and which are illusions crafted to hide uncomfortable truths?

Cracks in the Canvas

Beneath this composed surface, however, cracks are beginning to show. The AI industry—once celebrated as the unstoppable bull market—now appears tangled in a web of hidden issues and concealed practices. SMCI, a major player in the AI server market and one of NVIDIA’s largest clients, finds itself at the center of this drama. The company’s failure to file its quarterly report and the sudden resignation of its auditor, Ernst & Young (EY), raise troubling questions. EY’s departure, citing a loss of trust in SMCI’s management, casts doubt on the company’s financial practices and challenges the very stability of the AI ecosystem it’s part of. Could these cracks be the first signs of a deeper crisis, one that might expose the industry’s carefully hidden truths?

For Nvidia’s Accounting Red Flags Check out this article ( HERE )

The Bowler Hat of Financial Risk

For NVIDIA, SMCI has been a vital partner, its massive orders bolstering NVIDIA’s rise as a top AI player. But with $14 billion in accounts receivable—much of which could be at risk if SMCI’s finances crumble—NVIDIA and, perhaps, the entire AI sector hang in the balance. Should SMCI’s troubles reveal a larger trend of exaggerated demand, the AI industry’s polished exterior may shatter, exposing vulnerabilities that had been masked. Like the calculated misdirection in The Thomas Crown Affair, the AI market may have drawn investors into a tale spin of confusion, portraying stability while hiding serious financial risks.

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(Super Micro statement on their 10-Q delay)

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