Welcome to our dedicated page for Jumia SEC filings (Ticker: JMIA), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Jumia Technologies AG (JMIA) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the company’s regulatory disclosures as a foreign private issuer. Jumia files annual reports on Form 20-F and furnishes current reports on Form 6-K under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, offering investors structured insight into its pan-African e-commerce operations, financial performance, and governance.
Through its 20-F filings, Jumia presents audited financial statements, segment information, risk factors, and detailed explanations of its marketplace, logistics network, and JumiaPay payment service. The company’s 6-K reports are used to furnish press releases and other updates, including quarterly financial results, preliminary key performance indicators (KPIs), and changes to the Supervisory Board. For example, Jumia has used Form 6-K to report quarterly revenue and GMV figures, operating loss and adjusted EBITDA loss, liquidity position, and appointments or resignations of Supervisory Board members.
Key operational metrics disclosed in these filings include Orders, Gross Merchandise Volume (GMV), Quarterly Active Customers, and payment-related indicators. Jumia defines these metrics in its filings and explains how they are used internally to monitor platform usage and evaluate performance. The company also provides reconciliations for non‑IFRS measures such as Adjusted EBITDA and describes concepts like cash burn and working capital movements.
On Stock Titan, Jumia’s SEC filings are updated in line with submissions to the EDGAR system. AI-powered summaries help explain the contents of lengthy documents, highlighting items such as revenue composition (marketplace vs. first-party sales), expense trends, liquidity developments, and governance changes. Users can review Forms 20-F and 6-K, along with exhibits that include earnings press releases and KPI announcements, to understand how Jumia reports its progress toward its strategic and profitability objectives.
Jumia Technologies AG director Jonathan D. Klein has filed an initial statement of beneficial ownership on Form 3. The filing reports direct ownership of 150,137 American Depositary Shares (ADS) of Jumia Technologies AG, held jointly with his spouse. Each ADS represents 2 ordinary shares of Jumia Technologies AG.
Jumia Technologies AG Chief Executive Officer Francis Michel Daniel Dufay filed an initial Form 3 reporting his existing equity interests in the company. He holds 255,425 American Depositary Shares (ADS), with each ADS representing two ordinary shares. He also holds several tranches of Virtual Restricted Stock Units (VRSUs) linked to ordinary shares, granted under the company’s 2021, 2023 and 2025 Virtual Restricted Stock Unit Programs. These VRSUs are subject to performance criteria and vest on various dates between December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2029. Depending on conditions and company choice, each VRSU may be settled in cash based on the average ADS closing price over a short period after specific financial reports, or converted into one ordinary share if settled in equity.
Jumia Technologies AG director and EVP Finance & Operations Antoine Maillet-Mezeray filed an initial ownership report showing equity-linked interests in the company. The filing lists several grants of Virtual Restricted Stock Units (VRSUs) over ordinary shares, with underlying amounts such as 132,000, 157,500 and other blocks. These VRSUs were granted under the company’s Virtual Restricted Stock Unit Programs from 2021, 2023 and 2025, are tied to performance criteria and vest on dates ranging from December 31, 2025 through December 31, 2029. The report also shows direct ownership of 299,992 American Depositary Shares (ADS), and each ADS represents 2 ordinary shares. The company may settle the VRSUs in cash or, at its discretion, in equity, in which case each VRSU converts into one ordinary share.
Jumia Technologies AG director Judja-Sato Blaise filed a Form 3 reporting beneficial ownership of 16,000 American Depositary Shares. Each ADS represents 2 ordinary shares of Jumia Technologies AG, so this stake equals 32,000 ordinary shares. The filing records current holdings rather than a new trade.
Jumia Technologies AG director Hiridjee Hassanein Shahreza has filed an initial ownership report showing indirect holdings of 12,213,838 American Depositary Shares (ADS). Each ADS represents 2 ordinary shares of Jumia Technologies AG. The ADSs are held through Axian Telecom entities that are ultimately 100% owned by Hiridjee.
This filing is a Form 3, which records existing ownership and does not report a new purchase or sale of ADSs.
Jumia Technologies AG filed an initial Form 3 showing director Pierre-Yves CALLOC'H’s existing stake. The filing reports that he directly holds 52,499 American Depositary Shares (ADS) of Jumia. Each ADS represents 2 ordinary shares of Jumia Technologies AG, according to the footnote.
Jumia Technologies AG director Eriksson Anne Kembene Ooga filed an initial statement of beneficial ownership on Form 3. This filing establishes her status as a director and provides a baseline disclosure of her equity position in the company, without reporting any transactions.
Jumia Technologies files its annual Form 20-F, highlighting a still loss-making but narrowing profile across African e-commerce markets. The company reports net losses of $104.2 million in 2023, $99.1 million in 2024 and $61.5 million in 2025, with accumulated losses of $2.2 billion as of December 31, 2025. Management stresses continued reliance on external equity financing, noting prior net proceeds of $94.7 million from an August 2024 equity offering and describing debt financing as currently unlikely. The filing details extensive risk factors tied to political and economic instability, high inflation and currency volatility in key markets like Nigeria and Egypt, underdeveloped logistics and payments infrastructure, cybersecurity incidents, fraud and chargeback exposure, and dependence on third-party logistics, payment providers and sellers. Competitive pressure from global and regional e-commerce players, heavy operational complexity and the need to keep investing in technology, logistics and marketing all raise uncertainty about Jumia’s path to sustained profitability.
Jumia Technologies AG has filed its Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2025 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. This report contains the company’s audited consolidated financial statements and detailed information about its operations and business.
Jumia states that a PDF of the Annual Report is available on its investor relations website, and investors can request a hard copy of the audited financial statements free of charge via email. The company highlights that it operates a leading pan-African e-commerce platform across 8 African countries, combining a marketplace, logistics network, and payment gateways.
Jumia Technologies AG reported strong growth and narrower losses for Q4 and full-year 2025 while outlining a path to profitability. Fourth-quarter revenue rose to $61.4 million from $45.7 million, and GMV increased to $279.5 million from $206.1 million, showing double-digit growth in usage and monetization.
Q4 operating loss improved to $10.6 million from $17.3 million, and Adjusted EBITDA loss nearly halved to $7.3 million from $13.7 million, helped by higher gross profit and cost efficiencies. Net cash used in operating activities dropped sharply to $1.7 million from $26.5 million, reflecting better working capital and lower cash burn.
For 2025, revenue grew to $188.9 million and GMV to $818.6 million, while loss before income tax narrowed to $60.1 million from $97.6 million. Liquidity stood at $77.8 million at year-end, down $56.1 million over the year. Jumia will cease operations in Algeria, which represented about 2% of 2025 GMV, to concentrate on stronger markets. For 2026, the company guides to GMV growth of 27–32% (adjusted for perimeter effects), Adjusted EBITDA loss between $25 million and $30 million, and reaffirms targets of Adjusted EBITDA breakeven and positive cash flow in Q4 2026 and full-year profitability in 2027.