Taiwan’s Keelung District Prosecutors Office raided Super Micro Computer’s Taiwan office and the residences of six individuals on Monday, alongside the sites of three affiliated companies, widening an investigation into the alleged smuggling of Nvidia chips into China using Super Micro servers. Taiwanese data center operator Chief Telecom and Super Micro distributor Albatron Technology were also searched. Super Micro shares fell as much as 9% on the news before recovering some of the loss. The company said it is cooperating with Taiwanese authorities and remains committed to protecting its technology and intellectual property, adding that its products continue to be targeted in smuggling schemes it does not control. That Monday’s raid is the second, larger action in the same investigation – not the opening move – is what NewsTrackerToday flags as the detail that changes how seriously this needs to be read: Taiwan’s first raid happened on May 21, hit 12 locations, and already produced criminal charges against a Super Micro co-founder.
The May 21 raid targeted approximately 50 high-end Super Micro servers equipped with Nvidia chips that prosecutors allege were routed to China, Hong Kong, and Macau using forged documents and fraudulent customs declarations, in a scheme valued at approximately $2.5 billion. The U.S. Department of Justice unsealed charges in March 2026 against three individuals connected to the scheme, including Super Micro co-founder Wally Liaw, alleging conspiracy to violate U.S. export control law. The DOJ charges and the Taiwanese criminal investigation are running in parallel against overlapping facts, which means Monday’s expanded raid – hitting six new individuals and three additional affiliated companies including a data center operator and a distributor – represents Taiwanese prosecutors building out the network of intermediaries beyond the original suspects rather than revisiting already-charged conduct. The Wally Liaw connection is what NewsTrackerToday traces as the precedent that gives Monday’s raid its weight: this is not Taiwan investigating an unproven allegation against an anonymous network, it is expanding a case that has already produced federal charges against a company co-founder.
Daniel Wu, who covers geopolitics and energy, places the enforcement pattern in context: “Taiwan occupies a uniquely exposed position in AI chip export enforcement. It manufactures the overwhelming majority of the world’s advanced semiconductors through TSMC, supplying both Nvidia and AMD, while simultaneously needing to maintain credibility with Washington that it is not a leak point for Chinese chip access. Taiwan does not currently classify AI chip exports to China as a criminal offense – prosecutors can only charge violations of existing Taiwanese law, like document fraud, rather than the export control violation itself. That legal gap is precisely why Taipei is now considering legislation that would criminalize the exports directly, which would hand prosecutors a much sharper enforcement tool than the workaround charges currently available.”
Liam Anderson reads the market reaction: “Super Micro stock down 9% intraday, recovering some by close. The company has not been charged. Its co-founder has been, separately, by the DOJ. Investors are pricing reputational risk and potential future liability, not a confirmed corporate violation. The stock’s partial recovery suggests the market views this as Taiwan executing the next phase of an already-known investigation rather than new, surprising information. The bigger overhang for Super Micro is whether Taiwan’s expanded probe eventually implicates company-level knowledge or involvement, rather than individual employees or distributors acting independently.” That distinction – individual versus corporate culpability – is what determines whether Super Micro faces meaningful business disruption or whether this remains a story about specific bad actors using the company’s hardware against its policies.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang addressed the broader smuggling problem directly last week, telling shareholders that data centers built with diverted chips are “a dead end” because Nvidia will not provide support, software updates, or repairs for hardware it knows was illegally exported. That statement is both a genuine technical constraint – unsupported AI infrastructure degrades and eventually becomes unusable at scale – and a deliberate signal that Nvidia wants distributors and resellers to understand the company will not look the other way. Whether Taiwan’s expanded raid this week reflects coordination with Nvidia’s own internal investigations, or runs entirely on the Taiwanese prosecutors’ independent timeline, is unclear from public reporting. The criminalization question Taipei is now weighing is what News Tracker Today puts at the center of where this goes next: a formal export control crime, rather than document fraud charges, would give prosecutors tools that match the scale of what they are investigating.
The most defensible near-term projection is that Taiwan’s investigation continues expanding through the supply chain – distributors, data center operators, logistics intermediaries – before any decision on whether Super Micro as a corporate entity faces liability beyond its co-founder’s individual DOJ charges. If Taipei does move to criminalize AI chip exports to China directly, the legislative process will take months, but the political momentum behind it is now visible in two consecutive raids within six weeks. For Super Micro specifically, the stock’s partial recovery after Monday’s selloff suggests the market has priced in continued investigation as the base case rather than imminent corporate charges. Whether that calibration holds depends on what the six individuals and three companies searched on Monday reveal under questioning, and that is the evidence NewsTrackerToday reaches toward as the next concrete data point this investigation will produce.