Today: 21 June 2026
MercadoLibre stock gains 2.9% as week starts, investors look at MELI growth spend
21 June 2026
3 mins read

MercadoLibre stock gains 2.9% as week starts, investors look at MELI growth spend

New York, June 20, 2026, 18:01 (EDT)

  • MercadoLibre finished Thursday at $1,635.15, up 2.87% for the last five sessions. U.S. markets were closed after for Juneteenth and the weekend.
  • Galperin-linked trust structure kept 3,400,136 shares, or roughly 6.7%, after an internal estate-planning move—not a market sale—according to a June 18 SEC filing.
  • Investors looking ahead this week are watching execution. Free shipping, credit growth, and Brazil competition continue to push revenue, but those factors are also capping margins.

MercadoLibre shares listed in the U.S. are starting the new week up slightly after closing at $1,635.15 at the end of a holiday-shortened week. Investors saw a 2.87% gain in the last five sessions, but the stock is still down 18.82% so far this year, MarketScreener said. The Nasdaq e-commerce and fintech firm also posted a fresh ownership filing but did not report new earnings.

Timing is key here. U.S. markets shut Friday for Juneteenth. Nasdaq’s usual hours are Monday to Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern, so Thursday’s close gives the last clear price before investors adjust positions on Monday.

Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.9% on Thursday and posted a 2.4% gain for the week. That beat the S&P 500, which was up 0.9% for the week, as the market pulled back some of its midweek drop. MercadoLibre wasn’t at the front of that rally, but it was in the mix.

The latest company disclosure involved a regulatory filing. A Schedule 13D amendment showed Meliga No. 1 LP shifted 3,400,136 MercadoLibre shares over to Meliga No. 1 Corp., calling it part of an estate planning restructure and saying no payment was involved. According to the filing, Meliga No. 1 Corp., Galperin Trust /SD, and Corpag Trust South Dakota Inc. together held roughly 6.7% of MercadoLibre as of June 17.

This isn’t a typical trading trigger like missing earnings or cutting guidance. But because investors still connect the company with founder Marcos Galperin, shifts in how ownership and control are reported can move sentiment. In this case, the filing spells out more of the same: the stake is still big, just the structure is different.

Earnings quality is still the main question. MercadoLibre’s Q1 net profit came in at $417 million, down 15.6% from last year. Revenue climbed 49% to $8.8 billion. Gross merchandise value rose 42% to $19 billion. Reuters cited Leandro Cuccioli, Mercado Libre’s SVP of investor relations, who said the company was “willing to sacrifice these short term profits” as it saw value in the move. Reuters

Management hasn’t sugarcoated the trade-off. On the May earnings call, CFO Martin De Los Santos told investors the company isn’t aiming to “optimize short-term margins.” Ariel Szarfsztejn, now CEO, said MercadoLibre will keep putting money into credit cards, cross-border trade, first-party retail, and free shipping. These drive scale but are expensive bets. The Motley Fool

Brazil is still the swing market. MercadoLibre plans to put 57 billion reais—about $10.9 billion—into Brazil this year, most of it for logistics, marketplace upgrades and its Mercado Pago credit unit. The company also wants to open 14 new fulfillment centers in the country. More than half of MercadoLibre’s revenue comes from Brazil, according to Reuters in March.

MercadoLibre last year dropped its free-shipping minimum in Brazil to 19 reais from 79 reais, Reuters reported, trying to stay ahead as rivals Amazon, Sea’s Shopee and Temu ramp up competition. Amazon has rolled out a 15-minute grocery delivery service in the country, which it now calls a priority market, upping the ante on speed and subsidies.

Mexico remains a key growth spot. Mercado Libre said this month it plans to invest $4.6 billion in Mexico in 2026, which is up 35% from last year, Reuters reported. That means capital spending stays high even while investors call for clearer signs of a profit rebound.

Spending could outlast what the market wants to see. If credit losses pick up, funding free shipping could get tough. Deeper price cuts from Amazon or Shopee in Brazil could put on more pressure. In that scenario, revenue growth might not turn into higher operating leverage—sales go up, but profits lag. That is the risk on MELI looking to the second half.

Next up for the company is provisional Q2 results out Aug. 5. There’s also a Goldman Sachs event on Sept. 8. For now, Monday’s trading will show if investors see Thursday’s move as the start of a turnaround or just another pause. Shares remain far under where they opened the year.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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