NEW YORK, June 17, 2026, 15:06 EDT
- Coupang stock jumped 8.3% to $19.53 in mid-afternoon trade, outpacing the S&P 500 tracker SPY, which traded down.
- The company said in a filing it plans to book around $410 million in Korean privacy fines in second-quarter results and will seek judicial relief in Seoul. SEC
- CLSA kicked off coverage on the stock with an Outperform and set a $24 price target. The main question for investors is still around the fine and customer recovery. Investing.com
Coupang Inc shares surged Wednesday, adding to their rebound as South Korea put a price on a large privacy case and a bullish analyst call hit. The NYSE stock was last up 8.3% at $19.53, just below its $19.59 high. Volume neared 27.9 million shares.
Coupang flagged the change after the main stock overhang went from just rumors to an actual figure. The company said the Korean Personal Information Protection Commission plans to fine it roughly $278 million for a November 2025 data incident and about $132 million for a third-party advertising data program. Coupang hasn’t got any formal written notice yet, so the final amounts could change. SEC
Coupang said it plans to “vigorously pursue judicial relief” with Seoul Administrative Court. In its filing, the company said it expects to record an estimated $410 million charge in operating, general and administrative expenses for the second quarter, cutting into reported profit. SEC
CLSA’s Danny Lee began coverage on Coupang at Outperform with a $24 target, Investing.com reported. Lee’s team used discounted cash flow to value expected future cash in present terms. CLSA pointed to Coupang’s first-party platform and national logistics reach in South Korea. Investing.com
Regulators in South Korea say more than 33 million Coupang customers had their data leaked. Coupang, which reports most of its revenue from South Korea, didn’t spot the breach within the 72-hour window required by law. Reuters said the fine is about 1.4% of Coupang’s 2025 revenue. The company is still based in Seattle and trades in New York. Reuters
Coupang’s first-quarter earnings land with mixed signals for markets sorting out a rough period from the longer outlook. Net revenue hit $8.5 billion, up 8%, but the company posted a net loss to shareholders of $266 million. Adjusted EBITDA dropped to $29 million. Coupang Investor Relations
Management says the recovery is still in progress. Founder and CEO Bom Kim said on the May call, “January marked the low point.” CFO Gaurav Anand pointed to the active-customer decline as the “lagging effect” of the incident. Kim also told investors that by the end of April, Coupang had “closed nearly 80%” of the drop in WOW membership.
Competition is also in focus. Reuters said earlier this year Naver, E-Mart and Kurly are working to lure customers away from Coupang following the breach. Planned rule changes could hit Coupang’s lead in rapid overnight delivery. That puts customer trust at the heart of the shares, not only legal risk. Reuters
Coupang’s gain leaves risks. The company noted that paying fines doesn’t get paused during appeals, and those payments aren’t tax deductible. Coupang also cautioned judicial review is uncertain and can drag out. It flagged that earnings could still shift if probes keep going or customer activity drops. SEC
The stock moved against the broader market. SPY dropped 0.3%, while QQQ gained 0.5%. Coupang’s action didn’t line up with sector peers—it looked like a company story, not a group move.
Wall Street is heading into a holiday-shortened week with Friday’s Juneteenth closure. NYSE will still be open Wednesday, but Thursday is set up as the last chance this week to see if buyers will keep Coupang over $19. nyse.com