Two U.S. hedge funds that own $1.4 billion in Coupang stock are using the U.S.–Korea Free Trade Agreement to demand Washington punish Seoul for what they call an “unprecedented, discriminatory” regulatory assault triggered by a November data breach.
The 33-million-user leak that became a diplomatic weapon
When Coupang admitted on 30 November that hackers had siphoned names, phone numbers, e-mail addresses and scrambled passwords for roughly 33 million South Korean shoppers, the company expected fines and lawsuits. What followed, two of its largest U.S. shareholders now argue, was a coordinated government campaign designed to cripple the New York–listed e-commerce leader and drive its market value down by nearly a third.
In twin filings on Thursday, Greenoaks Capital and Altimeter Capital petitioned the U.S. Trade Representative to open a formal investigation and simultaneously served Seoul with KORUS arbitration notices. The funds, which together control more than $1.4 billion in Coupang stock, claim South Korea’s response violated the bilateral free-trade pact by singling out a U.S. company for “extraordinary, punitive and discriminatory” treatment.
From breach to blitz: a timeline of escalation
- 30 Nov 2025: Coupang discloses breach affecting 33 million users.
- 1–7 Dec: President Lee Jae-myung demands “maximum criminal penalties”; ruling-party lawmakers float exit-ban for executives.
- 8 Dec: Board member and Greenoaks founder Neil Mehta flies to Seoul for emergency talks.
- 15 Dec: Multiple agencies—labor, customs, fair-trade and tax—launch parallel probes.
- 22 Jan 2026: Investors file KORUS arbitration and USTR petition, triggering 90-day consultation window.
Why the case could redraw global tech enforcement
Washington has never imposed trade sanctions over a data-privacy dispute, but the investors’ 78-page USTR filing argues the precedent is already baked into U.S. law. By citing “unreasonable” and “discriminatory” conduct, Greenoaks and Altimeter open a path to counter-tariffs under Section 301 of the Trade Act—the same tool the U.S. has used against Chinese intellectual-property practices.
Seoul counters that the probes are legitimate public-interest enforcement. Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo, fresh from meetings with USTR Jamieson Greer in Washington, insists “misunderstandings” will be cleared up and that “sovereign regulatory rights” are non-negotiable. Yet the scope of investigations—spanning warehouse fire-code violations to customs valuation of imported sneakers—has convinced shareholders the breach is merely a pretext.
Market shock: $8 billion erased in eight weeks
Since the disclosure, Coupang’s Nasdaq-listed shares have fallen 27 percent, vaporizing roughly $8 billion in market capitalization. Options volume spiked to five-year highs as Korean retail investors fled local brokerage platforms. Bond spreads on the company’s 2028 notes widened 112 basis points, signaling credit-rating pressure that could raise borrowing costs for future logistics expansion.
What KORUS arbitration actually means
The 2012 U.S.–Korea Free Trade Agreement allows investors to bypass domestic courts and seek binding damages from an international panel. If consultations fail after 90 days, the case moves to the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes in Washington. A final award can include monetary damages plus compounding interest, enforceable in any of the 170 countries that subscribe to the ICSID convention.
For context, Oleksandr Goncharov won $1.1 billion against Russia in 2022 over seized oil assets, while Elliott Management secured a $420 million judgment against South Korea itself in 2020 over a Samsung merger. Coupang investors have not disclosed a damages figure, but legal experts say the scale of share losses and ongoing regulatory risk could push any award into the multi-billion-dollar range.
Seoul’s political calculus: nationalism vs. supply-chain prestige
President Lee, facing legislative elections in April, has cast Coupang as a foreign actor that “exported Korean consumer data abroad.” The framing plays well domestically but collides with Korea’s simultaneous pitch to Biden-era supply-chain initiatives that rely on U.S. capital and cloud technology. Any USTR retaliation—tariffs on semiconductors, batteries or even K-pop content—would hit Korea’s export-driven economy just as global demand softens.
Bottom line for investors and consumers
A USTR investigation decision is due within 45 days. If Washington accepts the petition, public hearings and proposed countermeasures could follow, dragging Korean heavyweights such as Samsung and Hyundai into a cross-Pacific regulatory cross-fire. For Coupang, victory in arbitration could restore investor confidence; for Seoul, defeat would signal that domestic privacy politics can carry a quantifiable trade cost.
Until the 90-day KORUS consultation window closes, expect volatile swings in Coupang shares and behind-the-scenes lobbying from both governments. The dispute has already redefined how data-breach fallout is priced in emerging-market tech names: regulatory risk is no longer a local affair—it is a geopolitical commodity.
Stay with onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative breakdown of every filing, ruling and market reaction as this landmark trade clash unfolds.