NEW YORK, June 9, 2026, 11:05 EDT
- Coupang shares rose roughly 2.0% to $15.49 in morning U.S. trade. Major ETFs SPY and QQQ fell.
- South Korea’s privacy regulator will meet June 10 to weigh sanctions over a major Coupang customer data leak.
- A separate fair-trade penalty announced Tuesday was minor, but it added to the regulatory drag.
Coupang Inc. shares gained in New York on Tuesday. Traders shrugged off a new South Korean advertising penalty and turned to a key privacy ruling expected Wednesday, which could decide the price tag from last year’s data breach.
The stock was last at $15.49, up 31 cents, or 2.0%. Shares opened at $15.33. For comparison, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF dropped 0.5% while the Invesco QQQ Trust slipped 1.1% during the period.
Tuesday’s fine wasn’t the main story. South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission meets June 10 to review more sanctions over the breach that exposed over 33.6 million records, according to a government probe. The watchdog will decide if Coupang broke privacy law and what orders or penalties should come next.
South Korea’s Fair Trade Commission said Coupang misled customers from August 2020 to May 2022, showing some “Wow” membership prices as regular discounts, though they actually included a single-use coupon. Regulators issued a corrective order and fined Coupang 500 million won, which is the maximum allowed in this case. Korea.kr
The privacy complaint is the bigger market risk here. Yonhap points to existing rules that allow fines up to 3% of sales for personal data leaks. The final penalty isn’t automatic—it depends on details like the size of the violation, damage, and how the company responds. If that 3% figure were used on Coupang’s projected 2025 revenue, Yonhap says the max possible fine could reach about 1.36 trillion won. The commission sets the actual amount.
Coupang said the leaked data was limited to names, emails, phone numbers, delivery addresses, some order details, and some building-entry codes. Payment and financial data, user IDs, passwords, and identity-card details weren’t accessed, according to the company. Coupang also pushed back on part of the government’s statement about how many building-entry codes were exposed.
Coupang shares bounced, which points to some investors thinking the privacy issue could be more predictable now. In its first-quarter update, the company reported revenue up 8% to $8.5 billion. Coupang posted a net loss of $266 million for the quarter. It repurchased $391 million worth of shares and the board cleared an extra $1 billion for more buybacks.
Coupang Founder and Chairman Bom Kim told investors in May that January was the “low point” for Product Commerce revenue growth after the data incident. Kim also said by the end of April, Coupang had recovered about 80% of the lost WOW memberships. Management is pushing the idea that the breach impact was temporary, not structural. MarketScreener
Coupang is still struggling to earn back trust at home. Earlier this year, Reuters said Naver, E-Mart and Kurly started pushing harder on fast delivery after Coupang’s data breach. Shinyoung Securities analyst Seo Jung-yeon told Reuters, “There is still nothing quite as convenient as Coupang.” Seo said, “the key question” now is how well competitors can win share. Reuters
The relief trade only goes so far. Another record privacy fine, stricter orders, or a new blow to user trust could put the brakes on paid member growth again. That would open more space for Naver and other rivals, if users start thinking convenience doesn’t make up for shaky data security.
Coupang CFO Gaurav Anand told investors during the May earnings call that the company is still “complying with all the regulatory requirements” and will continue talks with regulators. Seoul will see if that holds up, then the market will follow. en.yna.co.kr