What to Watch in 2012: Two Elections That Could Transform Latin America http://t.co/OjfgF0As via @AddThis @latintelligence
$Elektra share surge spooks Mexico investors http://t.co/qxFvfs9g (A company with a real free float of 6 pct? #onlyinmexico)
Analysis: Elektra share surge spooks Mexico investors
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Anyone investing in funds linked to Mexico’s IPC stock index in 2011 would have lost nearly double their money had it not been for the gains of a little-known company whose shares rarely change hands.
Grupo Elektra’s stock almost tripled in a year when Mexico’s share index fell, making the company the country’s third biggest by market value – thanks largely to a financial trick that had nothing to do with its discount retail or banking businesses.
The gains recorded by the company, owned by billionaire television magnate Ricardo Salinas, were the biggest of any firm in Brazil, Mexico or Argentina in 2011. Without changes to stock index rules, analysts fear it could further distort Mexico’s IPC index or the widely used MSCI Latin America and MSCI Mexico indices.
Shares in Elektra, which offers Mexico’s poor loans for washing machines and other consumer items, surged 165 percent to 1385.72 pesos from 522.85 pesos a year earlier – despite the fact that sales were up only a quarter of that.
“It does not help Mexico at all to have this sort of behavior in the index,” said Stacy Steimel, managing director and head of Latin America equities at PineBridge Investments. “This does not enhance our appetite for Mexico.”
Mexico’s equity market has lagged its rival Brazil in new public offerings and has struggled to attract investment. The stock market capitalization is about 30 percent of Mexican gross domestic product, next to some 50 percent for Brazil.
Elektra’s price rise was powered by two things: methodology changes that increased its importance in Mexico’s benchmark IPC index, and a derivative instrument known as an equity swap that allows the company to monetize its share-price gains.
Latino Immigration to the U.S. Could End This Year – The Atlantic http://t.co/PxSjP5m1
Last story, plus this on illegal who can have lifetime of dialysis but no transplant = sad state of US healthcare http://t.co/8p03ZzNH
Cartels use legitimate trade to launder money, U.S., Mexico say – latimes.com http://t.co/w66m0R1J
The curious case of #cofetel contracts http://t.co/nQmPqKL4 via @reuters
Mexico telecom regulator signs contracts to friends
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – The president of Mexico’s phone and television regulator approved two contracts worth roughly $200,000 for businesses run by two friends, including one who works as a lobbyist for telecom companies.
The contracts were for public relations and legal work for Mexico’s telecom regulator Cofetel and were signed by the agency’s head, Mony de Swaan.
There is no evidence that de Swaan received a financial benefit from the contracts and he denies any wrongdoing.
But they are raising questions about his judgment as he tries to enforce fair play and more competition in industries dominated by the world’s richest man, Carlos Slim, and companies representing a quarter of Mexico’s stock exchange.
Mexico’s public servants’ law says officials should recuse themselves from matters in which they might have a personal interest, but it is vague on what constitutes a “personal interest”.
“In light of these contracts, any decision by the regulator could be questioned,” said Shannon O’Neil, a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and an expert on Latin America who has previously written about Slim and the telecommunications industry.
De Swaan is adamant that he has always acted within the rules. “Mine is an irreproachable track record over 14 years as a public servant,” he told Reuters.


