$SERV keeps gettng knocked down this week by shorts, not sellers. 🤔
Here's what nobody sees. 👇
Buyout candidacy discussed this week across multiple firms. Poor exposure due to recent events.
Postmate, cost Uber $2.6B before it was Serve Robotics Spinoff. Sitting under $600M market cap today.
Huge connections and investment stack, $NVDA, $UBER, $DASH $SYM, $WMT, any idea what the last two have in common?
Robot delivery utilization has increased more than 1400% in 2026. With 2000 units deployed. Scaling shows infrastructure supports expansion.
Technical:
56% off exchange Darkpool volume is the highest in 30 days, between $7-9 range = 100M volume.
77M Share Float
29% Short Interest
@ 21M shares
4.2 days to cover
- Tracked 550k being used daily to aid price control.
Multiple higher gaps to fill, perfect setup for a potential squeeze with 85% rating. Trigger = above avg volume and $9 price reclaim.
Future Valuation Multiples range from normal to full scale.
Short term 3-6x
2030+ 39-79x
The Math 👇 Part 1 - Retail Ops.
https://t.co/YePjjrgvtg
$SERV: A Simple Valuation Comparison
Many investors know that Uber $UBER acquired Postmates in 2020 for approximately $2.65 billion.
What's interesting is that Serve Robotics originally came out of Postmates, making that acquisition a useful reference point when thinking about SERV's potential value.
SERV currently has about 77 million shares outstanding.
If SERV were valued at the same $2.65 billion that Uber paid for Postmates:
$2.65 Billion ÷ 77 Million Shares = $34.42 per share.
SERV is attempting to automate the most expensive part of delivery: the last mile.
Uber remains a strategic partner.
Not financial advice. Just a valuation comparison using the Postmates acquisition as a reference point.
https://t.co/tvtCMMsiYH
@BenPopeCST Why? Why trade the farm to get a little better? Why blow up the process before it’s complete. Our youngsters will be entering their primes in 2-3 years from now so why trade to win now or barely make the playoffs before we even know we have a squad good enough to compete for cups
@jayhawks_report So Paul Pierce is the most successful followed by…. A drop off to Joe Embiid and another to Wiggins and Heinrich ? Then there’s a drop off to the next tier. Not a ton of great NBA players have come out of KU considering the prestige