UP 1W-business jet without autopilot, but the runway looks clearWheels Up Experience Inc.BATS:UPTotoshkaTradesTechnically, Wheels Up (UP) broke out of a long falling wedge and returned to the wide demand zone around $1.00–$1.30, where weekly support has formed. Volume expansion and bullish divergence signal that accumulation is taking shape. As long as price stays above $1.05, the structure remains constructive with initial upside targets at $1.60 and $1.80, while a breakout above $2.00 could open the door toward $6.00. Fundamentally, the company continues its transformation after the liquidity crisis and strategic partnership with Delta Air Lines. Management has shut down unprofitable low-margin programs, refocused on high-yield corporate and frequent-flyer clients, and introduced a leaner “asset-light” model by outsourcing part of its fleet to partner operators. Q3 2025 results showed revenue near $185 million with solid gross bookings growth and improved operational efficiency - 99 % flight completion and 89 % on-time performance mark the best metrics since restructuring began. Losses and negative cash flow remain, but cost discipline is improving, and the Delta integration is slowly turning into a real commercial synergy. If corporate demand keeps strengthening and free cash flow moves toward breakeven, UP may turn into a rare small-cap comeback story in the aviation sector. Tactically, the plan remains simple - hold above $1.05, look for movement toward $1.60 and $1.80, take partial profits near $2.00, and re-enter on retests around $1.20–$1.30 if volume confirms. A weekly close below $0.95 would invalidate the bullish scenario. The market has heard “we’re taking off” before but this time, there’s at least a real runway under the wheels.