Mexico notched up a remarkable number of firsts in the markets last year. It was the first emerging markets borrower to issue bonds with collective action clauses, it retired its […]
Category: Mexico
Mexico Launches Another First
Mexico capped a three-year campaign in 2003 to construct an even and long-dated yield curve in the local market when it successfully place a MP$1.19 billion ($108 million) 20-year fixed […]
A Sale and a Partnership Derailed
One company is high on ambition. The other is deep in
distress. The owners of Mexico’s top railroad now are feuding over
deal gone bad involving a choice asset.
Looking Abroad
Mexico’s pension fund managers soon will be able to
invest overseas. Debaters at a LatinFinance conference in November
looked to the future of offshore investing.
PIONEERING THE EFFICIENT FRONTIER: The Inaugural LatinFinance Mexican Pension Fund Forum
LatinFinance presented the Mexican Pension Fund Forum
as a vehicle for learning and a catalyst for change in the Mexican
markets as new doors are opened for pension fund investments. In
case you missed this event, access the complete speaker
presentations online and exclusive to
www.latinfinance.com.
A Gamble, Then Hard Work
Seven years ago, Canada’s Scotiabank took a 10% stake in Inverlat, a Mexican bank laid waste by the 1995 peso crisis. It paid the government, which had taken over Inverlat, […]
And Then There Was One
Banorte has come a long way in a short time. As Mexico’s last big locally-owned commercial bank, Banorte has its work cut out to compete against giant foreign-owned banks that […]
América Móvil Moves In
The Mexican cellular operator has gobbled up competitors in South America in a bid to be a top player in every market where it operates.
Mid-Size Ministering
Pedro Aspe, the former Mexican finance minister who resurrected the country’s finances in the late 1980s, raises money for small- to medium-sized companies starved of capital.
The Mexican Banking Crisis Lives On
Eight years after the government’s banking intervention, the Mexican public still lacks a full accounting of the costly decisions taken to stabilize the country’s financial system.
