Coupang (CPNG) shares edged slightly lower even as fresh data pointed to a clear rebound in platform activity following its recent data breach. The South Korean e-commerce giant saw monthly active users climb back to 35.03 million in March, signaling that customer confidence is gradually stabilizing after months of disruption.
According to data from IGAWorks and WiseApp Retail, Coupang’s estimated card-based transactions also jumped 12% month-over-month to 5.7 trillion won (approximately US$3.83 billion). This marked a sharp reversal from the three-month downtrend triggered by the breach disclosure, suggesting that consumer spending behavior is normalizing.
The recovery in spending is particularly notable given the scale of the prior decline. Although March figures showed strong improvement, overall transaction volumes still remain slightly below the 5.9 trillion won peak recorded in October.
Coupang, Inc., CPNG
Despite the gap, the rebound indicates that Coupang’s core ecosystem, including its Rocket Delivery logistics network, continues to retain strong user engagement. The company has reaffirmed its long-term expansion strategy, maintaining plans to extend Rocket Delivery nationwide by 2027, reinforcing its competitive positioning in Korea’s fast-moving e-commerce sector.
While Coupang regained traction in active users and spending, competition across the Korean and regional e-commerce market remains intense. Rival platforms such as 11Street and Gmarket continue to compete domestically, while global players like Temu and AliExpress are expanding aggressively in the region.
Temu, in particular, led March shopping app downloads with 749,320 new installs, outpacing Coupang in new user acquisition. However, despite stronger download momentum from competitors, Coupang still maintains a leading position in overall usage and transaction volume, highlighting its entrenched market dominance even amid disruption.
Beyond operational recovery, Coupang is also navigating a growing wave of legal and regulatory pressure linked to the data breach fallout. U.S.-based investors Greenoaks and Altimeter have filed a notice of intent under the U.S.–Korea Free Trade Agreement, signaling potential investor–state dispute settlement (ISDS) action against South Korean authorities.
At the same time, Coupang faces a U.S. securities class-action lawsuit alleging misrepresentation of cybersecurity risks, with claims that billions in market value were erased following breach-related disclosures. In South Korea, regulatory penalties could reach up to 800 million dollars under current frameworks, with lawmakers considering even stricter rules that would significantly raise corporate accountability thresholds.
The broader regulatory environment is also shifting, as South Korea advances reforms that could increase fines for major data violations to as much as 10% of annual revenue and expand executive responsibility for cybersecurity governance.
Investors appear to be balancing Coupang’s operational rebound against its legal and regulatory overhang. While user growth and spending recovery are positive signals, lingering uncertainty around lawsuits, government scrutiny, and potential policy changes continues to weigh on sentiment.
As a result, Coupang (CPNG) stock remains under pressure, reflecting a market that is cautiously optimistic about recovery but wary of long-term risk exposure.
The post Coupang (CPNG) Stock; Dips Marginally as User Growth Returns After Data Breach Hit appeared first on CoinCentral.

