Our Analysis·May 30, 2026·12 min read

What Stord’s $250M Series F Signals for AI-Enabled Omnichannel Commerce Fulfillment Infrastructure

A $250M Series F at a $3B valuation shows investors are paying up for a company trying to turn fulfillment into the physical intelligence layer independent brands need to compete with Amazon-like delivery expectations.

$3B Series F valuation
$250M Series F raise
$15B+ Annual GMV
~100 Fulfillment locations

Context

On May 26, 2026, Stord announced a $250M Series F at a $3B valuation, led by existing investors including Strike Capital, Kleiner Perkins, Founders Fund, Franklin Templeton, Baillie Gifford, G Squared, BOND, and Lux. The round doubled Stord’s valuation from the $1.5B mark attached to its $200M+ Series E in May 2025. The company also disclosed more than $15B in annual GMV, more than 1,000 customers, nearly 100 fulfillment locations, 8B annual data points, roughly 10x revenue growth over four years, and a software business that tripled in 2025.

The thesis is not simply that Stord can run more warehouses. The thesis is that commerce execution is becoming a strategic control point. Brands now need accurate delivery promises, inventory visibility, routing, warehouse execution, returns, tracking, and post-purchase communication to protect conversion, margins, and customer ownership. Stord is trying to bundle the physical network, software layer, AI tools, robotics work, and live operational data into one execution system for independent commerce.

That is why the timing matters. In early 2026, Stord launched AI-powered estimated delivery dates, order and inventory summaries, workflow automation, instant shipping codes, and StordAI capabilities such as Chat, Search, and Feed. It also launched Stord Labs to test agentic AI, robotics, and automation against live fulfillment orders before deploying proven capabilities across its network. This made the round read less like a capital-intensive 3PL expansion and more like a bet on physical AI applied to commerce infrastructure.

The tension is obvious. Fulfillment is one of the hardest places to build venture-scale infrastructure because labor, real estate, parcels, acquisitions, and service failures are all unforgiving. But that is also why the round is interesting. If Stord can use scale, data, AI, and automation to make the physical layer compound, it can become a neutral anti-Amazon execution layer for brands. If it cannot, the company risks looking like an expensive logistics operator dressed in platform language.

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Q1What are some interesting signals regarding the size of Stord’s Series F round?

Stord’s $250 million Series F is one of the largest recent rounds in AI-enabled omnichannel commerce fulfillment infrastructure. If Flexport is included as a direct competitor, Stord ranks second because Flexport’s latest disclosed financing was $260 million. If Flexport is treated as a broader freight and supply-chain platform, Stord’s Series F is effectively the largest recent pure-play commerce fulfillment infrastructure round.

The peer comparison is revealing. Flexport’s $260 million round is only 1.04x larger than Stord’s $250 million Series F. Stord’s round is 25% larger than ShipBob’s $200 million Series E, 39% larger than Cart.com’s $180 million growth round, almost 4x ShipMonk’s $65 million latest disclosed round, and roughly 24x ShipHero’s roughly $10.4 million latest disclosed round.

The strict last-round ranking among private or venture-backed direct competitors is Flexport first at $260 million, Stord second at $250 million, ShipBob third at $200 million, Cart.com fourth at $180 million, ShipMonk fifth at $65 million, and ShipHero far behind. But the better category interpretation is that Stord and Cart.com are now the two freshest large-round names in commerce fulfillment infrastructure.

We go deeper on this capital concentration point in our latest market report.

Stord’s Series F is the largest round in the category over the last 12 months. The only close peer is Cart.com’s $180 million March 2026 round. In the last 6 months, those two rounds created about $430 million of category capital, with Stord representing roughly 58% of that total.

The 24-month capital concentration is even more aggressive. Across the broader category set, Stord raised roughly $450 million+ over the last 24 months, including its $200 million+ Series E and $250 million Series F. Total disclosed category capital over that same period was roughly $826.5 million+. Stord captured about 54% of all category capital over 24 months.

The round is not top-tier across all industries because the 2025 and 2026 funding market has been distorted by giant AI, defense, robotics, semiconductor, and infrastructure rounds. Inside commerce fulfillment infrastructure, however, $250 million is a massive signal. Investors are concentrating capital into a few companies that already have the scale to matter.

Evidence noteRound-size comparisons use disclosed latest-round amounts for private or venture-backed companies in the retained competitor set. Flexport is shown because it overlaps through fulfillment and logistics software, but it is also broader than pure commerce fulfillment infrastructure. Category concentration uses disclosed funding amounts and lower bounds where rounds were announced as “more than” a figure. See methodology below.

Q2How well-funded is Stord today compared with its competitors?

Stord is now one of the best-funded independent commerce fulfillment infrastructure companies, with more than $775 million in total funding after the Series F. It is still behind Flexport’s roughly $2.4 billion to $2.5 billion total funding, and its rank versus Cart.com depends on whether Cart.com’s total is treated as above $650 million or above $1 billion. Against ShipBob, ShipMonk, and ShipHero, Stord is clearly in a different funding tier.

The clean competitor ranking is Flexport first at roughly $2.4 billion to $2.5 billion, Stord around second with more than $775 million, Cart.com around second or third depending on the source range, ShipMonk around $365 million, ShipBob around $333 million, and ShipHero around $50 million to $61 million. Public-company units such as Amazon FBA, DHL Supply Chain, GXO, Ryder, and Radial are not comparable because they are corporate businesses, not venture-funded startups.

The Series F changed Stord’s funding position meaningfully. Before the round, Stord had raised roughly more than $525 million. After the round, it crossed more than $775 million. That gives Stord a clear funding advantage over ShipBob and ShipMonk and makes it look like a consolidator, not just another challenger.

For more data on how we ranked comparable companies, please check full memo.

On funding velocity, Stord is faster than most commerce-fulfillment peers, but slower than Flexport and possibly Cart.com. Stord was founded in 2015 and has raised more than $775 million over roughly 11 years, or about $70 million per year. Flexport has raised roughly $185 million to $192 million per year since founding. Cart.com may be raising at roughly $108 million to $167 million per year, depending on which total funding estimate is used. ShipBob and ShipMonk sit closer to $28 million to $30 million per year.

The funding cadence shows a sharp reacceleration after the funding winter. Stord raised heavily in the 2020 to 2022 supply-chain boom, paused during the tougher venture market, then came back with a $200 million+ Series E in May 2025 and a $250 million Series F in May 2026. The Series F came roughly 12 months after the Series E, with a 1.25x larger round and a 2.0x higher valuation.

The interesting part is the valuation move. The round size increased modestly, but the valuation doubled. Investors were not just giving Stord more cash. They were repricing the company upward because the story became more attractive, the metrics got bigger, and the AI-enabled physical-intelligence framing made the business feel less like a traditional 3PL.

Funding per estimated headcount should be left out because a reliable current headcount figure is not available. Open roles are useful as a hiring signal, but they are not a good enough proxy for headcount. The better scale-adjusted indicators are Stord’s more than $15 billion in annual GMV, more than 1,000 customers, nearly 100 fulfillment locations, and 8 billion annual data points.

Evidence noteTotal-funding comparisons include only private or venture-backed companies with comparable disclosed financing data. Corporate divisions and public-company business units are excluded from startup-style rankings because they do not have comparable round histories. Where total funding estimates vary by source, the range is treated as directional rather than exact. See methodology below.

Q3What is the current funding activity in AI-enabled omnichannel commerce fulfillment infrastructure?

Funding activity in AI-enabled omnichannel commerce fulfillment infrastructure is active, but very concentrated. In the last 6 months, the two meaningful category rounds were Stord’s $250 million Series F and Cart.com’s $180 million growth round. That is about $430 million of recent category capital across just two companies.

Over the last 24 months, the broader category raised roughly $826.5 million+ across Stord, Cart.com, Swap, Nimble, and ShipTop. Stord raised roughly $450 million+ of that through its $200 million+ Series E and $250 million Series F. Cart.com raised about $230 million. Nimble raised $106 million. Swap raised $40 million. ShipTop raised $0.5 million.

One whole section is dedicated to the category funding map in our latest market report.

Stord ranks first in 24-month category capital with roughly 54% of the total. Cart.com ranks second with roughly 28%. Nimble ranks third with roughly 13%. Stord, Cart.com, and Nimble together captured about 95% of disclosed category capital over the last 24 months.

Funding activity is concentrated around a few scaled platforms, especially Stord and Cart.com, rather than spreading across a long tail of new fulfillment startups. Investors appear to be selecting platforms that already have enough operational density, customer volume, and technology ambition to plausibly become category leaders.

Deal count is less exciting than capital deployment. The category had 2 meaningful rounds in the last 6 months, compared with no major rounds in the previous 6 months under the tighter category definition. But over a 12-month comparison, deal count is down because the prior 12-month period had more smaller financings. The useful read is that fewer companies are raising, but the winners are raising bigger rounds.

Capital deployment is more bullish. Last-6-month capital was about $430 million versus essentially zero in the previous 6 months under the tighter category count. Last-12-month capital was about $430 million versus roughly $396.5 million+ in the previous 12 months, up about 8%. Capital is still flowing, but it is moving into fewer, larger bets.

The category is becoming a late-stage scale contest. Stord and Cart.com are the two obvious names. Nimble is important as a robotics fulfillment angle, but it is narrower. ShipBob and ShipMonk remain relevant operators, but their largest rounds are older. The freshest capital-market story is Stord versus Cart.com.

Evidence noteMarket-activity analysis uses announcement dates and sums disclosed funding rounds in the retained category set. The category includes fulfillment infrastructure companies where software, AI, automation, or commerce operations are meaningfully tied to the physical fulfillment layer. It excludes pure carriers, pure freight brokers, pure storefront software, and generic ERP systems. See methodology below.

Q4How strong is the thesis behind Stord’s Series F?

The thesis behind Stord’s Series F is strong because it is backed by real company scale, recent peer fundraising, category capital concentration, Amazon pressure, agentic commerce pressure, and adjacent physical-AI investment patterns. The thesis is that independent brands need a unified execution layer that combines fulfillment infrastructure, logistics software, AI, robotics, and live operational data to compete with Amazon-like customer expectations.

In the last 6 months, Cart.com is the closest similar-thesis company. It raised $180 million in March 2026 to scale unified commerce, logistics infrastructure, AI capabilities, workflow automation, predictive analytics, and fulfillment efficiency. The similarity is very high because Cart.com, like Stord, is selling the idea that brands need software plus physical logistics infrastructure to compete.

In the last 12 months, the broader similar-thesis set includes Cart.com, Salasa, and Colosseum. Salasa raised a $30 million Series B in August 2025 around technology-first e-commerce fulfillment and AI fulfillment capabilities. Colosseum raised a $20.8 million Series B in June 2025 around AI-driven logistics, SaaS, automation, logistics centers, and fulfillment networks. These are smaller and less directly comparable than Cart.com, but they support the same broader view that commerce logistics is being rebuilt around software and AI-enabled execution.

It’s actually something we elaborate on in our latest market report.

In the last 24 months, the similar-thesis set adds Swap and Nimble. Swap raised a $40 million Series B in March 2025 around DTC operations software for cross-border shipping, tracking, returns, inventory forecasting, and logistics workflows. Nimble raised a $106 million Series C in October 2024 around AI robotics and autonomous e-commerce fulfillment. Nimble is narrower than Stord, but it strongly overlaps with the physical-intelligence and warehouse automation part of the thesis.

Including Stord, similar-thesis capital was about $430 million in the last 6 months, $480.8 million in the last 12 months, and $676.8 million in the last 24 months. Excluding Stord, peer capital was about $180 million in the last 6 months, $230.8 million in the last 12 months, and $426.8 million in the last 24 months. Stord is not alone, but the market is not crowded either.

Stord ranks first in the strict 24-month similar-thesis set with its $250 million Series F, representing roughly 36.9% of the total. Cart.com ranks second with $230 million, or about 34.0%. Nimble ranks third with $106 million, or about 15.7%. Stord and Cart.com together captured about 70.9% of strict similar-thesis capital over the last 24 months. Investors clearly see this as a scale-driven category.

Across other sectors, there were 2 strong analogue rounds in the last 12 months: Hadrian and Figure AI. Hadrian raised $260 million in July 2025 to build AI-powered factories for aerospace and defense. It is the cleaner analogue because it shares Stord’s core architecture: physical infrastructure, software, AI, robotics, and operating data. Figure AI raised more than $1 billion in September 2025 around humanoid robotics and embodied AI. It is less commerce-specific, but it supports the broader investor shift toward AI systems operating in the physical world.

The thesis is attractive because Amazon keeps raising the delivery bar, AI shopping makes accurate fulfillment data more valuable, and brands increasingly need infrastructure that connects inventory, delivery promises, returns, warehouse execution, and post-purchase customer experience. A fragmented stack will be punished by consumers and, increasingly, by AI agents.

At the end, Stord is not really pitching “AI logistics.” It is pitching the re-bundling of commerce infrastructure around the execution layer. Storefront, OMS, WMS, 3PL, parcel, returns, customer communication, and fulfillment data have historically been fragmented. Stord is betting that the winning layer collapses those functions into one execution system. If that works, the company deserves to be valued more like infrastructure software. If it does not, it will look like a very expensive logistics operator.

Evidence noteSimilar-thesis analysis includes companies whose round narrative is more than 80% aligned with Stord’s retained thesis. The strongest retained commerce peers are Cart.com, Nimble, Swap, and ShipTop, with Hadrian and Figure AI used only as adjacent physical-AI analogues outside commerce. See methodology below.

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Methodology, Sources & Disclosure

Timing

All timing comparisons in this note are measured as of May 30, 2026. Funding-round time windows refer to announcement dates, not legal close dates, unless a close date is separately disclosed.

Investment thesis

The retained investment thesis behind Stord’s Series F is that independent commerce brands need a vertically integrated physical intelligence layer that combines fulfillment infrastructure, logistics software, AI, robotics, and live operational data so they can compete with Amazon Prime-like delivery expectations without giving up customer ownership to marketplaces. This thesis was retained because Stord framed the round around physical intelligence, nearly 100 fulfillment locations, more than $15B in annual GMV, over 1,000 customers, and 8B annual data points, while also launching Stord Labs to test agentic AI, robotics, and automation against live orders.

Category definition

The category used for market-activity analysis is AI-enabled omnichannel commerce fulfillment infrastructure. It includes companies that help brands manage fulfillment, warehousing, shipping, inventory visibility, order routing, returns, and post-purchase customer experience through a mix of physical logistics operations and software. It includes tech-enabled 3PLs, fulfillment networks, e-commerce logistics platforms, unified commerce infrastructure, warehouse management or order management platforms when tied to fulfillment, and commerce enablement providers serving DTC, B2B retail, and omnichannel brands. It excludes pure parcel carriers, pure freight brokers, pure storefront or e-commerce platforms, pure marketing tools, pure robotics vendors with no commerce operating layer, and generic ERP systems.

Competitor set

The direct competitor set used for funding comparisons includes Cart.com, ShipBob, ShipMonk, Amazon FBA / Multi-Channel Fulfillment, Ryder E-commerce by Whiplash, Radial, GXO Logistics, DHL Supply Chain eCommerce / fulfillment services, ShipHero, and Flexport Fulfillment / Deliverr legacy assets. Competitor funding rankings include only private or venture-backed companies with comparable disclosed financing data, so Amazon FBA, DHL Supply Chain, GXO, Ryder, and Radial are discussed qualitatively but excluded from startup-style funding rankings where they do not have comparable round data. Flexport is included in strict competitor comparisons because it overlaps through fulfillment and logistics software, but it is also flagged as broader than pure-play commerce fulfillment infrastructure.

Similar-thesis set

The similar-thesis set includes companies whose round narrative is more than 80% aligned with Stord’s retained thesis. The retained peer rounds are Cart.com’s $180M March 2026 growth round, Cart.com’s $50M May 2025 round, Nimble’s $106M October 2024 Series C, Swap’s $40M March 2025 Series B, and ShipTop’s $500K September 2024 seed round. Hadrian’s $260M July 2025 round and Figure AI’s $1B+ September 2025 Series C are used as adjacent physical-AI analogues, not direct commerce fulfillment peers.

Capital concentration

Category capital concentration is calculated by summing disclosed funding rounds in the retained category set over the relevant period. When round amounts are disclosed as “more than” a given figure, concentration figures are treated as approximate and use the disclosed lower bound.

Sources

We selected these sources because they come either from direct company announcements, which are the primary source for funding, product, acquisition, and corporate milestones, or from tier-1 / authoritative publications, which provide independent validation, sector context, and comparable market signals: Stord Series F announcement, Stord newsroom, Stord Series E announcement, Stord AI solutions launch, StordAI assistants launch, Stord 2026 State of AI in E-Commerce report, Stord acquisition of Shipwire, Stord acquisition of Ware2Go from UPS, Stord acquisition of Pitney Bowes e-commerce fulfillment center, Stord Series D expansion, TechCrunch Series F coverage, Reuters via Economic Times Series F coverage, Axios Pro Series F coverage, SiliconANGLE Series F coverage, FreightWaves logistics-sector workforce context, Forbes company context before Series F, Supply Chain Dive fulfillment network context, Cart.com comparable round, Cart.com $180M comparable round, Nimble comparable round, Swap comparable round, ShipTop comparable round, Hadrian comparable physical-AI round, Figure AI comparable physical-AI round, Stord seed round, Stord Series A, Stord Series B, Stord Series C, Stord Series D and Fulfillment Works acquisition.

Disclosure

We are not affiliated with Stord, its investors, or the named comparable companies. No payment, consideration, or commitment of future business has been received from Stord, its investors, or any named comparable company in connection with this note. Nothing herein constitutes investment advice or an offer to transact in any security.

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