Stord raises $250 million to give independent brands the shipping speed they need to compete with Amazon

The Atlanta logistics startup, now valued at $3 billion, is betting that AI and robotics can close the fulfillment gap that keeps smaller retailers from matching Amazon’s next-day delivery promise


Stord raises $250 million to give independent brands the shipping speed they need to compete with Amazon

TL;DR

Stord raised $250 million at a $3 billion valuation to expand its warehouse network and invest in AI and robotics, aiming to give independent brands the fulfilment speed needed to compete with Amazon.

Stord, a logistics technology company that helps retailers manage inventory, checkout, and fulfillment, has raised $250 million in a Series F round that values the company at $3 billion. The round was led by Strike Capital with participation from Founders Fund, Kleiner Perkins, Franklin Templeton, Baillie Gifford, G Squared, and Bond.

The funding doubles Stord’s valuation from its $200 million raise at $1.5 billion in 2025 and brings total capital raised since the company’s founding in 2015 to more than $775 million.

Stord’s pitch is straightforward. Amazon’s competitive advantage is not its product catalogue or its payments system. It is the infrastructure that lets customers buy something and trust it will arrive the next day. Stord wants to deliver that same infrastructure to every brand that does not have Amazon’s warehouse network, logistics software, or delivery fleet.

“That’s what infrastructure we want to deliver to every other independent brand,” said Sean Henry, Stord’s co-founder and chief executive.

The company currently operates nearly 100 warehouses globally and processes more than $15 billion in annual gross merchandise value across more than 1,000 customers. It has completed eight acquisitions to date, including the purchases of Ware2Go from UPS in 2025, Shipwire from CEVA Logistics in early 2026, and Pitney Bowes’ e-commerce fulfillment operation.

Alongside the funding, Stord announced the launch of Stord Labs, a facility designed to test robotics and automation systems before deploying them across the warehouse network. Henry said the company is working with more than five robotics vendors but did not name them. The goal is to use AI and robotics to streamline order handling, reduce costs, and push delivery speeds closer to what Amazon offers its Prime members.

The timing reflects a broader shift in how smaller retailers think about logistics. Amazon delivered 30-minute service to dozens of US cities in May through its new Amazon Now programme. It deployed its millionth warehouse robot in 2025. Its North American retail margin hit 7 per cent in the most recent quarter, a figure once considered impossible for a low-margin e-commerce business. For independent brands, the gap between their delivery capabilities and Amazon’s is widening, not closing.

Stord’s approach is to build a shared logistics layer that aggregates the kind of warehouse density, software integration, and AI-driven inventory management that only the largest retailers can afford on their own. The model positions Stord as an alternative to either surrendering to Amazon’s marketplace, where brands give up customer data, pricing control, and margin, or attempting to build their own fulfilment operation from scratch.

Henry and co-founder Jacob Boudreau started Stord while students at Georgia Tech through the university’s CREATE-X programme. The company reached unicorn status in 2021 with a $90 million Series D led by Kleiner Perkins, survived the subsequent venture funding winter, and has now raised three consecutive rounds of $90 million or more.

The investor lineup signals confidence in the category. Founders Fund, which recently closed a $6 billion fund after burning through $4.6 billion in under a year on bets including Anthropic and Anduril, participated alongside Kleiner Perkins, which raised $3.5 billion for AI-focused funds in March. Both are making large bets on AI infrastructure across industries, and logistics is one of the sectors where AI investment is translating into measurable operational gains.

The challenge for Stord is execution at scale. Operating nearly 100 warehouses while integrating acquisitions, rolling out robotics across facilities, and maintaining the delivery speed that justifies a $3 billion valuation is operationally complex. Shopify tried to build its own logistics network and ended up selling the operation to Flexport in 2023 after concluding it could not compete with dedicated fulfilment providers.

But the market opportunity is real. Amazon controls roughly 40 per cent of US e-commerce. The other 60 per cent is served by brands that overwhelmingly lack the infrastructure to offer comparable delivery speeds. If Stord can close that gap, even partially, the $3 billion valuation may look like a discount.

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