South Korean court suspends FTC designation Coupang founder Kim Bom as controlling entity


FILE PHOTO: Bom Kim Founder and CEO, Coupang speaks during the Milken Institute's 22nd annual Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., April 30, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

SEOUL, July 14 (Reuters) - A ⁠South Korean court on Tuesday suspended a Fair Trade ⁠Commission (FTC) decision to designate Kim Bom, the founder of ‌U.S.-listed e-commerce firm Coupang, as the group's controlling entity.

The Seoul High Court granted an injunction sought by Coupang and Kim, suspending the designation pending a ​ruling in the main lawsuit, according ⁠to a court filing.

The court ⁠said it granted the request due to "an urgent need to prevent ⁠irreparable ‌harm" to the applicants from the change in designation.

It found no evidence that suspending the FTC measure ⁠would run counter to the public interest.

The suspension ​will remain in ‌effect until 30 days after the court delivers its ⁠ruling in ​the main lawsuit, when the legality of the FTC's designation will be decided upon, it said.

In April, the FTC designated Kim, a ⁠Korean-American, as the group's controlling person, replacing ​Coupang as the group's "same person" under South Korean fair trade law and subjecting the company to additional disclosure and governance requirements.

The designation, ⁠which Coupang challenged in court, followed an FTC probe into the involvement of Kim's family members in the group's operations and came amid heightened regulatory scrutiny of the company after a ​major customer data breach.

South Korea's regulatory ⁠actions involving Coupang, including a separate record fine imposed by the ​Personal Information Protection Commission over the ‌data breach, have caused friction with ​the U.S. over the treatment of the company.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Thomas Derpinghaus)

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