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Serve Robotics Inc. ( NASDAQ:SERV – Get Free Report ) CEO Ali Kashani sold 5,000 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction on Tuesday, December 24th. The stock was sold at an average price of $14.55, for a total transaction of $72,750.00. Following the completion of the transaction, the chief executive officer now directly owns 3,290,990 shares in the company, valued at $47,883,904.50. This trade represents a 0.15 % decrease in their ownership of the stock. The transaction was disclosed in a legal filing with the SEC, which is available through the SEC website . Ali Kashani also recently made the following trade(s): Serve Robotics Stock Down 7.7 % Shares of SERV stock opened at $16.29 on Friday. Serve Robotics Inc. has a 1 year low of $1.77 and a 1 year high of $24.09. The firm’s fifty day simple moving average is $10.83 and its 200 day simple moving average is $8.78. Institutional Inflows and Outflows Analyst Ratings Changes Several equities analysts have commented on the company. Northland Securities assumed coverage on Serve Robotics in a report on Friday, October 18th. They set an “outperform” rating and a $16.00 price target on the stock. LADENBURG THALM/SH SH assumed coverage on shares of Serve Robotics in a research note on Monday, October 28th. They issued a “buy” rating and a $16.00 target price on the stock. Seaport Res Ptn upgraded shares of Serve Robotics to a “strong-buy” rating in a report on Monday, October 7th. Finally, Northland Capmk upgraded Serve Robotics to a “strong-buy” rating in a research note on Friday, October 18th. Two equities research analysts have rated the stock with a buy rating and three have given a strong buy rating to the stock. According to data from MarketBeat, the stock currently has a consensus rating of “Strong Buy” and an average price target of $16.00. Check Out Our Latest Report on Serve Robotics Serve Robotics Company Profile ( Get Free Report ) Serve Robotics Inc designs, develops, and operates low-emission robots that serve people in public spaces with food delivery in the United States. It builds self-driving delivery robots. The company was formerly known as Patricia Acquisition Corp. and changed its name to Serve Robotics Inc in July 2023. Recommended Stories Receive News & Ratings for Serve Robotics Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Serve Robotics and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter .
The Vancouver Canucks are in trouble. The Canucks' 2024-25 season was on shaky enough ground with their Norris-winning and Hart-deserving captain, Quinn Hughes. They've technically lost more games than they've won, even if they've taken eight of their losses to overtime. Their 17-10-8 record that has them just barely in a Wild Card spot in the Western Conference. Now they'll be without Hughes for an indeterminate amount of time, as well as franchise forward Elias Pettersson for a slightly more determinate amount of time. "They're not gonna make the trip," said head coach Rick Tocchet after Sunday's practice. "Petey is probably a week away, give or take a day here or there, and Quinn's probably week-to-week." That's bad news for the Canucks, who are already missing Filip Hronek, who is expected to be out until the end of January while recovering from a reported upper-body injury, suspected to be a shoulder separation. That leaves the Canucks without their entire top pairing on a blue line that was already questionable behind them . "He's just a tough kid" That raises the question of whether Hughes should have played in the Canucks' December 23 game against the San Jose Sharks. Hughes was already hurting, with rumours suggesting a hand injury, and was considered a game-time decision. He not only played, but also led the Canucks in ice time. "He couldn't have hurt what he has any more," said Tocchet. "He's just a tough kid and he won us the game with a couple of assists. I don't think him playing — I don't know, I don't think it would have made a difference." That raises another question: what's the difference between now and then? If Hughes could push through the pain to play against the Sharks and Tocchet says he can't hurt it any more, why can't he push through it now? Did the injury get worse in the last week despite Tocchet saying playing the game wouldn't make a difference? Did they find out more about what the injury was and shut him down because it was worse than they originally thought? As much as you want to give the Canucks and their medical staff the benefit of the doubt, they don't have the best track record , which leads to these types of questions. There's a long history of lionizing hockey players (and other athletes) for pushing through pain to accomplish something great in big moments. It's just questionable whether game 34 of an 82-game regular season against the last-place Sharks counts as one of those big moments. Was it really worth the risk — any risk — to win that game? For that matter, if the Canucks supposedly couldn't beat the lowly Sharks without Hughes, what does that say for their chances while he's out week-to-week? The Canucks fell apart without Hughes and Pettersson on Saturday The Canucks' first game without Hughes and Pettersson went well for 55 minutes, as the Canucks took a 4-1 lead in the third period and seemed to be in complete control. Then it all fell apart, as the Canucks gave up three goals in the final five minutes of regulation and lost in overtime to the Seattle Kraken. It was one of the worst collapses in NHL history — literally, as it was only the third time a team had come back from being three goals down in the final five minutes of a regular season game. You have to think that result would have been different with Hughes and Pettersson, not only for what they contribute on the ice, but also their calming presence on the bench. They're two of the most unflappable players on the team. But while Hughes' leadership will certainly be missed, what he brings on the ice will be the most obvious absence. He's the most reliable breakout artist in the NHL and often the only defenceman on the Canucks who can be counted on to transition the puck up ice with possession. Hughes leads the Canucks in corsi (58.4%), shot differential (+86), and goal differential (+18) at 5-on-5. With Hughes on the ice at 5-on-5, the Canucks have out-attempted their opponents 740-to-528, out-shot their opponents, 358-to-272, and out-scored their opponents 39-to-21. That's not to mention what he contributes on the power play. In other words, when Hughes is on the ice, the Canucks are an elite, dominant team. Without Hughes, it's a different story. When Hughes isn't on the ice at 5-on-5, the Canucks have a 42.5% corsi, a minus-114 shot differential, and a minus-10 goal differential. The Canucks' corsi and shots-for percentage without Hughes would rank dead last in the NHL; their goals-for percentage would rank 28th. The difference between the Canucks with and without Hughes is the difference between being a top-five team in the NHL and being arguably the worst team in the NHL. So, yes, the Canucks are in trouble. They could be hanging on for dear life for the next few weeks until Hughes returns or praying for a medical miracle that brings him back into the lineup at full health in a much briefer span of time. Either that or the Canucks are going to be forced to make a trade for a defenceman sooner than they might have liked. No one can replace Hughes but it's troubling just how bleak the Canucks' blue line looks without him and Hronek. The Canucks already needed at least one more top-four defenceman before Hughes got hurt; his injury just exacerbates that need.Enphase Energy ( NASDAQ: ENPH ) finished +8.4% in Monday's trading, leading broad gains in most solar stocks, after two members of the U.S. House submitted a resolution to suspend the 45X advanced manufacturing production tax credit, and rewrite the legislation toThe Latest: Former President Jimmy Carter is Dead at age 100A guardian is a person or entity appointed by a court to who is responsible for the care and supervision of a protected person, and has the legal right to make decisions for that person, typically due to age (old or young) or disability. Indiana Chief Justice Loretta Rush last week noted the number of vulnerable Hoosiers requiring guardianship or other caretaking services continues to rise, and caring for these individuals by creating a better system is both crucial and timely. "In recent years, it has become clear that further research on issues surrounding guardianship can help Indiana create a more effective system of oversight and supervision by aligning resources and designing a system that is easy to navigate and ensures justice is fairly administered," Rush said. To that end, Rush said the Supreme Court has impaneled an 11-member Indiana Guardianship Oversight Task Force tasked with identifying — no later than Dec. 1, 2025 — best practices, future programming, and policies and procedures to improve Indiana’s guardianship system. The high court order specifically directs the task force to focus on the role of the judicial system and the impact of potential reforms, how technology might bolster adult guardianship functions, issues of guardianship oversight, and potential improvements leading to better outcomes for all stakeholders. Listen now and subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS Feed | SoundStack | All Of Our Podcasts The task force is led by Monroe Circuit Judge Geoffrey Bradley and Tippecanoe Circuit Judge Sean Persin, and includes among its members Porter County Magistrate Ana Osan. Guardianship also has been a concern of state Sen. Mike Bohacek, R-Michiana Shores, who won legislative approval in March to establish a pilot program providing a neutral advocate for intellectually disabled women who give birth to a child. Senate Enrolled Act 16 (2024) requires a court presiding over an adoption hearing in LaPorte, Marshall or Starke counties between July 1, 2024, and July 1, 2026, to appoint a guardian ad litem to represent the interests of the mother if she has intellectual disabilities and a court-appointed guardian. Bohacek admitted the need for a guardian ad litem typically will be an "uncommon occurrence." But he said there are known cases of intellectually disabled women under court-appointed guardianships who are sexually assaulted, get pregnant, give birth and the child immediately is given up for adoption — regardless of the mother's wishes. Having a judge appoint a guardian ad litem to look out for the new mother's interests would at least give her some representation and a more reasonable transition into the adoption process, Bohacek said. The proposal was approved 45-0 in the Senate and 97-0 by the House before being signed into law by Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb.
Celtics center Kristaps Porzingis slated to make season debut on Monday night vs LA ClippersCOLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Tafara Gapare scored 19 points, freshman Derik Queen had 15 points and eight rebounds and Maryland beat Bucknell 91-67 on Wednesday night. Maryland opened the game on a 15-2 run, extended it to 25-7 with 10:38 left and led 51-28 at the break. The Terrapins led by at least 16 points the entire second half, which included runs of 12-0 and 9-0. Gapare scored the 10 straight points during the second-half run. Gapare threw down a highlight dunk while being fouled with 2:08 remaining to give Maryland an 89-62 lead. He was called for a technical foul after stepping over Patrick O’Brien, who was attempting to take a charge. Jayden Williams made the two free throws for Bucknell and Gapare missed his free-throw attempt that would have tied his career high of 20 points. Maryland (6-1) has won 20 consecutive home games against unranked nonconference foes with its last loss coming on Dec. 1, 2021, against Virginia Tech in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge. Julian Reese added 14 points and Selton Miguel scored 13 for Maryland. Gapare, a Georgia Tech transfer, reached double-figure scoring as a Terp for the first time. The Terrapins shot 50% from the field with three 3-pointers apiece by Gapare and Miguel. Ruot Bijiek led Bucknell (4-4) with 20 points and Josh Bascoe added 10. The Bison turned it over 20 times leading to 22 Maryland points. Maryland stays at home to play Alcorn State on Sunday. Bucknell returns home to play Siena on Saturday. ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball