SuperX: deliveries + buyback
SuperX completed first‑batch deliveries from its Japan Global Supply Center and disclosed progress on a share‑repurchase program, combining operational execution with capital‑return signaling. The twin moves suggest management confidence in supply capability and may prompt customers to accelerate procurement to lock delivery windows. (prnewswire.com 1) (prnewswire.com 2)
SuperX said on April 10 that it had already shipped the first batch of artificial intelligence servers from its Japan Global Supply Center on March 24, and on the same day it said it had bought back 1,286,580 shares at an average net price of $8.93 by April 9. That is a company trying to show two things at once: the factory is moving product, and the board is still willing to spend cash on its own stock. (prnewswire.com 1) (prnewswire.com 2) The delivery went to Digital Dynamic Inc. under a Japan partnership that also includes eole Inc., and the machines were SuperX XI6150 servers configured for the Japanese market. SuperX said each server used a 6530 central processing unit and an RTX Pro 6000 graphics processing unit, plus high-specification memory and storage. (prnewswire.com) This was not just a box-drop at a loading dock. SuperX said the package also covered racking the servers inside the customer’s data center, power-on testing, asset documentation, and three years of maintenance with next-business-day remote and on-site support. (prnewswire.com) The Japan site is new enough that the timeline matters. SuperX announced plans for the facility on July 28, 2025, said production officially started in Tsu City, Mie Prefecture, on January 30, 2026, and now says the first batch has already gone out, with more deliveries scheduled from late April through the end of August 2026. (prnewswire.com 1) (prnewswire.com 2) (prnewswire.com 3) SuperX says the plant can produce up to 20,000 artificial intelligence servers a year. For customers buying compute hardware, that number is the difference between a pilot project and a supplier that claims it can handle repeat orders without rebuilding its logistics each time. (prnewswire.com 1) (prnewswire.com 2) The company has been trying to sell itself as more than a server reseller. Its investor materials describe SuperX as a full-stack artificial intelligence infrastructure provider with hardware, power systems, liquid cooling, cloud services, and operations support, and the Japan center was pitched from the start as a place for final assembly, system integration, quality control, and local service. (investors.superx.sg) (prnewswire.com) That background helps explain why the buyback update landed next to the delivery news. SuperX’s board authorized up to $20 million of repurchases on November 26, 2025, and by April 9, 2026, the company said it had used roughly $11.5 million of that capacity, based on 1,286,580 shares at an average net price of $8.93. (prnewswire.com) (prnewswire.com) Management is also pairing that capital return with a very aggressive commercial story. When production started in January, SuperX said it had secured purchase orders worth an estimated $910 million and had memorandums of understanding tied to 5,000 more server units with estimated value of up to $2.1 billion over the next 12 months. (prnewswire.com) There is a reason customers may pay attention to this sequence. If a supplier has a fresh factory, a named first shipment, local installation support, and a published delivery window running through August 2026, buyers that were waiting for proof may decide to lock in slots before later batches fill up. (prnewswire.com) (prnewswire.com) The catch is that almost all of this story comes from the company’s own announcements, and the buyback program itself is flexible. SuperX said repurchases can happen on the open market or in private deals, the company is not required to buy any specific number of shares, and the plan can be suspended or discontinued at any time. (prnewswire.com) (prnewswire.com)