Illustration of U.S. investors notifying South Korea of arbitration over Coupang probe, symbolizing international trade dispute with flags, documents, and justice symbols.
Illustration of U.S. investors notifying South Korea of arbitration over Coupang probe, symbolizing international trade dispute with flags, documents, and justice symbols.
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Coupang U.S. investors notify South Korea of arbitration intent

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Two U.S. investors in Coupang have criticized South Korea's probe into the company's data breach as discriminatory, requesting a U.S. government investigation and notifying Seoul of intent to pursue investor-state arbitration. The South Korean government denies any discrimination, insisting the actions follow the law. Civic groups condemned the investors' moves as a violation of sovereignty.

On January 22, 2026, Greenoaks Capital Partners and Altimeter Capital Management notified the South Korean government of their intent to pursue investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) arbitration over the probe into Coupang. They plan to proceed under the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA), with formal arbitration possible 90 days after the notice. The investors claim South Korea's response to the November 2025 data breach, affecting about 33.7 million customers, exceeds scrutiny of domestic and Chinese competitors. Coupang stated the perpetrator accessed only around 3,000 accounts, but authorities view it as a massive leak warranting investigation.

The investors requested the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) to investigate Seoul's 'unreasonable and discriminatory' actions under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 and impose trade remedies. They criticized increased audits and penalties from bodies like the Fair Trade Commission and National Tax Service as Coupang gained market share, calling them the most in Korean history, leading to billions in lost market capitalization borne by U.S. shareholders. 'These losses have been borne directly by U.S. shareholders -- including individual investors and institutional funds holding the retirement savings of millions of American workers,' they said in a joint statement.

South Korea's Ministry of Justice plans to form a response team with relevant agencies for a thorough legal review. Prime Minister Han Min-seok told U.S. lawmakers in Washington on January 23 that 'there is no discrimination against Coupang whatsoever,' drawing a parallel to the detention of South Korean workers in Georgia last September. The presidential office had previously cautioned against framing the probe as a U.S. trade dispute, noting the unprecedented scale of the data leak and compliance with laws.

Coupang distanced itself, denying involvement in the petition. Seoul-based People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) issued a statement condemning the move: 'A U.S.-listed company, which generates the majority of its revenue in South Korea, failed to take even basic protection measures and leaked a massive amount of personal information of three quarters of the Korean population. Nevertheless, the American political and business communities have set out to apply diplomatic and trade pressure... It is not the basic attitude of a civilized nation.' An alliance of 135 civic and labor groups, including PSPD and the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, plans a press conference outside the U.S. Embassy in Seoul on January 23 afternoon to denounce the investors. Founded by Korean-American Bom Kim, Coupang derives about 90 percent of its revenue from South Korea.

Cosa dice la gente

Initial reactions on X to U.S. investors' arbitration notice against South Korea over Coupang's data breach probe include neutral journalistic reporting, support for investors alleging discriminatory treatment and unfair crackdowns, criticism viewing it as foreign violation of Korean sovereignty, and skeptical notes on underlying issues like delivery worker conditions and political implications.

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Dramatic illustration of U.S. investors petitioning against Seoul over alleged Coupang discrimination, as Coupang denies involvement.
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Coupang denies involvement in U.S. investors' petition against Seoul government

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Two U.S. investors have petitioned the U.S. government for an investigation into alleged discriminatory treatment of Coupang by South Korean authorities and notified Seoul of intent to file arbitration claims. Coupang denied any involvement in the petition. The South Korean government refuted claims of discrimination against the company.

Science Minister Bae Kyung-hoon said Wednesday that the government's probe into Coupang's South Korean unit is being conducted under legal principles without discrimination, refuting criticism from U.S. political circles. The statement came after the U.S. House Judiciary Committee launched an investigation into what it called South Korea's discriminatory targeting of American companies. The probe follows a massive data breach at Coupang affecting over 33.6 million accounts.

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Following the National Assembly's two-day hearing on its massive data breach, South Korea's government pledged to pursue all legal measures against Coupang Inc., condemning the e-commerce firm's passive response and data handling lapses amid public outrage.

New details emerge in the Coupang data breach saga: a former Chinese developer is the prime suspect, raising alarms over foreign worker vetting. A U.S. class-action suit gains over 2,300 applicants, while President Lee Jae Myung pushes for harsher data leak penalties.

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A massive data breach at South Korea's leading e-commerce firm Coupang has exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers. Police are tracking a Chinese former employee suspect using an IP address, while the government considers fines up to 1 trillion won. The breach, starting in June, went undetected for five months.

At a December 31 parliamentary hearing, Coupang's interim CEO Harold Rogers assured lawmakers that the company's 1.685 trillion won compensation plan for the November data breach does not require affected customers to waive lawsuit rights, amid disputes over the breach's scale and ongoing investigations.

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Following the December 18 announcement, South Korea's interagency task force investigating the Coupang data breach held its inaugural meeting on December 23 to probe the incident affecting 33.7 million users and discuss enhanced user protections.

 

 

 

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