Mexico Chapter in The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review; 11th edition

We are delighted to announce that the 11th edition of The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review Guide was recently published. With the contribution of our Partners Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly and Luciano Pérez.

 An overview to insurance & reinsurance laws and regulations that may occur in Mexico.

Click here to download the Mexico The Insurance and Reinsurance Law review Guide 2023.




Mexico Chapter in The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review; 10th edition

We are delighted to announce that the 10th edition of The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review Guide was recently published. With the contribution of our Partner Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly.

 An overview to insurance & reinsurance laws and regulations that may occur in Mexico.

Click here to download the Mexico Insurance & Reinsurance guide 2022 or on TLR website.




The 11th edition of The International Capital Markets Review

Partners Julián Garza, Gunter Schwandt and associate Fernando Quezada contributed to The International Capital Markets Review, part of the reputed The Law Reviews series published by Law Business Research.

This multi-jurisdictional guide addresses the comparative law aspect of  international capital markets workload and offers legal practitioners with a reference source.

The guide is now in its 11th edition, and covers 23 jurisdictions in which leading law firms offer the latest insights and regulatory updates.

The Mexico chapter can be downloaded free of charge aquí.

 

 




Insurance & Reinsurance (The Law Review 2021)

We are delighted to announce that the 9th edition of The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review Guide was recently published. With the contribution of our Partner Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly.

 An overview to insurance & reinsurance laws and regulations that may occur in Mexico.

Click here to download the complete guide.

 

 

 




Mexico Fundraising Chapter in The Private Equity Review 2021

The Law Reviews: 10th Edition – By Partners Hans P Goebel, Héctor Arangua, Adalberto Valadez and Associate Miguel A González

 

OUTLOOK

The private equity industry in Mexico has been re-energised in recent years by government reforms and policies, a stable macroeconomic situation, stable population growth rate, an increase in real income and an active entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Mexico has successfully completed USMCA (which superseded NAFTA) negotiations with the United States and Canada and has gone through a smooth, peaceful and democratic power transition following the presidential election that took place in July 2018, providing
certainty to investors. However, Mexico’s intention of being prepared for any scenario is clear from its aim to increase trade with Argentina and the Pacific Alliance (Colombia, Peru and Chile), as well as with the European Union and Asian countries, and from the government’s
continued efforts over the past few years in the infrastructure and energy sectors.

While the forecasts are moderate, we expect contract and investment opportunities to be abundant as government policies support a shift towards a larger role for a combined private and public investment in the Mexican infrastructure industry and in the still-booming energy
industries. Opportunities will also be presented by the continuing rise of the fintech industry and by the implementation of the governmental programme for the economic reactivation during 2021 and onwards. The outlook for the Mexican PE industry is, therefore, positive, with local funds becoming more global and deploying capital, and investments by foreign
funds increasing throughout the energy sector.

We predict that the regime governing publicly issued PE funds will continue to be improved, and that the regulations regarding investment restrictions applicable to Mexican pension funds will necessarily evolve towards alignment with the types of regimes seen in other, more evolved countries, allowing the pension funds to conduct privF_Mexicoate transactions and investments in funds or projects directly (rather than only through publicly issued securities such as CKDs, FIBRAs, FIBRA Es and CERPIs).

To read the full article, click here




The Public-Private Partnership in the Mexican market

Law Review – 7th Edition – Mexico – by Partner Alejandro Rojas and associate Benjamin Torrero

A brief description of the situation in Mexico regarding the law review of PPP projects, the process to submit an application, the considerations to be taken into account and which contacts should be consider for your process to succeed. It also includes a historical analysis of the industry in Mexico and the opportunities that the current government has to boost investment and growth.

“More than 14 PPP projects are still operating in the country in the health, telecommunications and transport sectors.”

“In future years, the PPP agenda in Mexico may increase, particularly in the transportation and telecommunications sectors, since the administration for 2018 to 2024 has shown particular interest in developing railways, highways and airports, as well as an extensive telecommunications network project to provide internet access and digital services across the country.”

“The energy sector has experienced changes as the open policy under former administrations was being slowed down by the current administration; notwithstanding, with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), the country’s power supply, as well as oil and natural gas activities, remain open to foreign investment and are protected as a covered sector under Chapter 14 subject to national treatment, minimum standard of treatment and an investment dispute resolution procedure.”

“The USMCA might also provide further confidence to foreign investors in other sectors, which, along with the recent assurances of the federal government regarding PPP projects, may drive the development of self-financed PPPs in Mexico as a means to increase foreign investment in the country.”

“Since the enactment of the PPP Law in 2012, there have been more than 100 public biddings for the implementation of projects through the PPP model focused primarily on the health, transportation, telecommunications, social and hydraulic infrastructure sectors. The energy and environmental sectors have also shown an increasing participation in PPPs, which translates into more projects ranging from solar photovoltaic power plants to waste management and waste-to-energy projects.”

To read the complete article, please click here.




The 10th edition of The International Capital Markets Review

Julián Garza, Gunter Schwandt y Jenny Ferrón contributed to The International Capital Markets Review, part of the reputed The Law Reviews series published by Law Business Research.

This multi-jurisdictional guide addresses the comparative law aspect of  international capital markets workload and offers legal practitioners with a reference source.

The guide is now in its 10th edition, and covers 23 jurisdictions in which leading law firms offer the latest insights and regulatory updates.

The Mexico chapter can be downloaded free of charge aquí.

 




Mexico Fundraising Chapter in The Private Equity Review

The Law Reviews: 9th Edition – By Partners Hans P Goebel, Héctor Arangua, Adalberto Valadez and Associate Miguel A González

Over the past 19 years, Mexico’s private equity (PE) industry has raised over US$58 billion in capital commitments to PE investments, according to the Mexican Private Equity Association (AMEXCAP). Mexico’s strong industrial and manufacturing sectors, along with recent reforms to policies and regulations, have had a positive impact on the PE industry, resulting in double-digit annual growth for the industry. Real estate and venture capital (VC) also had double-digit increases in the same period, of 16 per cent and 12 per cent, respectively. Currently, the number of active fund managers is over 180, with fund managers, or general partners (GPs), active across a range of sectors, and representing a sevenfold growth since the beginnings of the industry in the early 2000s.

In recent years, the Mexican government has been an important participant in and supporter of the PE industry, investing in more than 72 funds7 through institutional investors such as NAFIN (the national development bank), the Capitalization and Investment Fund for the Rural Sector, Bancomext and Banobras, and through investment vehicle Corporación Mexicana de Inversiones de Capital, SA de CV, or Fund of Funds, which has invested more than US$885 million in more than 84 funds and co-invested in 17 deals.8 In addition, the National Institute of Entrepreneurship helped the Mexican VC industry and seed capital ecosystem by investing or co-investing in 41 funds from 2013 to 2016. For 2016, the VC support grew to 100 million Mexican pesos, targeting one fund with an approach to the Asia-Pacific alliance countries, which is now finishing its fundraising period. Finally, domestic pension funds (AFOREs) have played a determinant role in the growth of the PE industry, having allocated more than US$20.4 billion through 106 capital development certificates (CKDs) and investment project certificates (CERPIs) since 2008. This amount may increase by a further US$5 billion, given the CKDs that are in the pipeline. Mexico is seen as one of the most favourable emerging markets to invest in, and is considered top in Latin America
according to various limited partner (LP) surveys, such as those conducted by the Association for Private Capital Investment in Latin America in 2014 and 2015, and by the Emerging Markets Private Equity Association in 2015, 2016 and 2017.9

Mexico returned to the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) list of the top 10 countries to invest in globally, by rising four positions to number nine, sitting alongside the United States, China, Germany, India, the United Kingdom, Brazil, France, Australia and Japan. The Mexican economy is being reshaped, and in spite of an adverse economic environment, allows dynamism of its international trade, and the structure of its debts minimises the impact of external factors making it a healthy option for investing. The WEF ranks Mexico in 46th place, out of 140 countries, in the 2018 edition of the competitiveness index, which shows that the country has microeconomic and acroeconomic institutions with strong foundations. Mexico is placed as the second-largest economy in Latin America (with an estimated GDP of US$1.222 trillion) and it is considered to have economic stability that has allowed to remain stable despite various difficulties. The Mexican economy has grown at an average annual rate of 2.5 percent for the past 10 years, mainly because of the implementation of new regulations to improve development, ensible monetary and fiscal policies, ordered management of public finances led by the Bank of  exico, and a gradual improvement in the country’s external environment, despite a zero per cent growth being estimated for 2019. The World Bank suggests Mexico might be the world’s seventh-largest economy by 2050 – a positive outlook that will only serve to attract direct foreign investment.

The PE industry and the VC sector in Mexico continue to grow and mature. The internationalisation of both funding sources and investment by domestic GPs suggests that Mexico is playing an increasingly influential role in financial and economic growth at both the regional and global levels. Within VC alone, Mexico has witnessed the number of GPs triple in the past seven years. The policies being implemented in Mexico, particularly the opening-up to competition of the energy and telecommunications sectors, and labour market reforms, have been welcome steps to attract investment and raise employment and, potentially, growth.13 This is evidenced by the extent to which infrastructure and energy funds have also increased significantly, reaching 30 funds in 2016 – a clear effect of the energy reform allowing private investments in the energy sector, including oil and gas, electric power generation and renewable energy. As at October 2017, an estimated US$25 billion in cash reserves were available for investment by PE funds investing in Mexico.14

Likewise, accumulated capital commitments from 2018 to September 2019 increased by 1.7 per cent. These capital commitments were mainly concentrated on seed and early stage VC funds.15 As at September 2019, three new Mexican funds had been formed, bringing the number of funds operating in Mexico to 126, of which 60 per cent are now investing or managing their investments, while almost one-third are still at the fundraising stage.16

In general, information about PE funds is not publicly available during the fundraising stage unless the funds are public funds raised in the securities market, such as CKDs, CERPIs or Mexican real estate trusts (FIBRAs).

The Mexican fundraising market has been in an upward trend since 2014. In the past, the most attractive sector has been real estate, but recently the VC sector has clearly been rising. Mexican PE funds are active, growing and covering a large spectrum of industries (business and financial services, consumer goods, healthcare, technology, oil and gas, etc.). VC funds mainly invest in consumer services, fintech and technology; real estate funds mainly target
the industrial (mostly automotive, aerospace and pharmaceutical), commercial, tourism and housing sectors; and the infrastructure and energy funds are currently concentrated in the oil and gas sector. In March 2018, the Law Regulating Financial Technology Institutions (the Fintech Law) was enacted, providing for regulation of, among other things, electronic payments, cryptocurrency transactions and crowdfunding mechanisms. According to Fintech Radar Mexico, conducted by Finnovista in May 2019, Mexico is very close to reaching the 400 fintech start-up mark, and, in 2019, it regained leadership as the largest fintech ecosystem in Latin America, in part because of a strong presence of entrepreneurship and e-commerce.17 The Mexican fintech industry has shown an annual growth rate of 29 per cent, with the creation of 98 new start-ups, with the dominating sectors being loans, payments and remittances.18 Reports from recent years have highlighted the high growth rates of fintech in Latin America, such as LAVCA’s 2017 Trend Watch: Latin American Venture Capital, which concluded that the fintech sector represents 25 per cent of the venture investments in information technology in the region. According to a survey conducted by Finnovista in collaboration with Endeavor, Mexican fintech companies have a monthly gross transaction value of 39 billion Mexican pesos, with an average of 8.7 million Mexican pesos being billed per fintech start-up per year. These results emphasise the importance and the possibilities of fundraising and VC investment in the development of the fintech ecosystem in Mexico. As the fintech industry represents a massive potential growth area in Mexico, the government has passed legislation that seeks to ensure financial stability and provide a defence against money laundering and corruption.

OUTLOOK
The private equity industry in Mexico has been re-energised in recent years by government reforms and policies, a stable macroeconomic situation, stable population growth rate, an increase in real income and an active entrepreneurial ecosystem. Mexico has successfully completed USMCA (which is expected to supersede NAFTA) negotiations with the United States and Canada and has gone through a smooth, peaceful and democratic power transition following the presidential election that took place in July 2018, providing certainty to investors. However, Mexico’s intention of being prepared for any scenario is clear from its aim to increase trade with Argentina and the Pacific Alliance (Colombia, Peru and Chile), as well as with the European Union and Asian countries, and from the government’s continued efforts over the past few years in the infrastructure and energy sectors.

While the forecasts are moderately strong, we expect contract and investment opportunities to be abundant as government policies support a shift towards a larger role for private investment in the Mexican infrastructure industry and in the still-booming energy industries. Opportunities will also be presented by the continuing rise of the fintech industry. The outlook for the Mexican PE industry is, therefore, positive, with local funds becoming more global and deploying capital, and investments by foreign funds increasing throughout the energy sector. If conditions remain the same and the growth rate remains at the levels we have been seeing, the PE industry should, according to AMEXCAP, reach US$80 billion by the end of 2020. We predict that the regime governing publicly issued PE funds will continue to be improved, and that the regulations regarding investment restrictions applicable to Mexican pension funds will necessarily evolve towards alignment with the types of regimes seen in other, more evolved countries, allowing the pension funds to conduct private transactions and investments in funds or projects directly (rather than only through publicly issued securities such as CKDs, FIBRAs, FIBRA Es and CERPIs).

To read the full article, click here




The Public-Private Partnership in the Mexican market

Law Review – 6th Edition – Mexico – by Partner Alejandro Rojas

A brief description of the situation in Mexico regarding the law review of PPP projects, the process to submit an application, the considerations to be taken into account and which contacts should be consider for your process to succeed. It also includes a historical analysis of the industry in Mexico and the opportunities that the current government has to boost investment and growth.

Mexico’s overview
The development of PPPs in Mexico began in 2004 under the scheme known as projects for the provision of services (PPS), although the enactment of the Law on Public-Private Partnerships (the PPP Law) and its Regulations occurred until 2012. In Mexico, however, different types of public-private investment schemes have been used since the early 1990s to implement infrastructure projects, such as concessions, financed public works and investment projects with deferred expenditure registration. These schemes served as direct precedents of PPPs as understood at the time of writing.

PPPs constitute a long-term contractual relationship between the public and private sectors for the provision of services to the public sector or the end user, in which the private developer provides, partially or totally, the infrastructure required for such services and, generally, the public entity pays a monetary consideration to the private developer. PPPs have been used for government policy reasons to increase social welfare, offer more and better infrastructure and foster investment in the country.

Since the enactment of the PPP Law in 2012, there have been more than a 100 public biddings for the implementation of projects through the PPP model focused on the following sectors: health, transportation, telecommunications, social and hydraulic infrastructure. Also, the energy and environmental sectors have shown an increasing participation in PPPs.

To ensure transparency and access to information, the federal government created two websites known as CompraNet and Mexico Projects Hub. CompraNet is a digital platform that provides public information on projects, bidding processes, procurements, leases, public works and other related services; while Mexico Projects Hub contains updated detailed information of the most relevant energy and infrastructure projects that require private investment. The Hub is part of the Mexican government’s initiative to create an investor-relations office to link investment projects with domestic and foreign potential investors, encouraging long-term financing for infrastructure.
In the following years, the PPP agenda in Mexico may increase, particularly in the transportation and telecommunications sectors, since the new administration for 2018 to 2024 has shown particular interest in developing railways, highways, airports, as well as an extensive telecommunications network project to provide internet access and digital services across the country.

PPP PROJECTS ARE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR INVESTMENT IN THE COMING YEARS

Mexico represents an opportunity for the promotion of PPP projects since they have been a fundamental mechanism in developing economies to increase the offer of infrastructure and public services, involving public and private funding with the participation of the private sector in the development of projects where the private sector has better knowledge and experience. As of 2016, 41 new federal PPP projects have been structured and developed in Mexico; of those 41 projects, 18 are in the structuring and pre-investment phase; six in the bidding phase; and 17 in the development and operation phase. These projects are focused on the transportation, health, telecommunications, social and hydraulic infrastructure.

When President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador took office in 2018, he announced an ambitious agenda in infrastructure, mainly focused on the south and south-east regions of the country, which are the most marginalised in terms of public services. This agenda included the development of new railways, highways, ports and refineries. At first, Mr Lopez Obrador proved to be reluctant and sceptical about PPP projects, however, at the end of 2019 he announced the National Infrastructure Plan, whereby the federal government plans to invest approximately 43 billion pesos in over 1,700 infrastructure projects from 2020 to 2024, mainly in roads and transportation, energy, tourism, water and sanitation; many such projects are structured under a PPP scheme. Besides, to prevent a reduction in foreign investment, it is essential that the federal government turns to PPPs as a viable option for structuring and developing new infrastructure projects that are much-needed in the country, gaining investors’ confidence and promoting the participation of the private sector in Mexico’s economic growth. The signing of the new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement certainly reflects the trust and confidence in the country for the upcoming future. Entering its second year, federal government may use this leverage created by the new T-MEC to boost the projects recently announced.

The development of PPP projects by states and municipalities has increased in recent years. In 2020, the State of Nuevo Leon intends to bid and award the first waste to energy project in Mexico. The estimated amount of investment will be US$500 million and it will be developed in the city of Monterrey, partly financed by the federal government through Banobras. Also, early in 2020, Fonadin will bid and award an MRO agreement under a PPP scheme for four federal roads and two international bridges on the states of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas, on a project known as the ‘Northeast Package’. The fact that local PPP projects have increased over the years is certainly a good sign for the sector itself, since it helps ease the burden on the federal budget.

For the upcoming year of this new administration, PPPs will become fundamental for the accomplishment of the goals established in the federal budget for 2020. If a safe environment for national and foreign investment is assured, PPPs can expect to grow in the following years, with some expected changes to provide more transparent and objective mechanisms in public biddings, as well as to properly manage public funds in the implementation of PPPs.

To read the complete article, please click here.




The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review

Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly, head of our Insurance and Reinsurance practice, contributed to the 6th edition of “The Insurance and Reinsurance Law Review”, a title published by Law Business Research. Editor of the publication is Peter Rogan of Ince & Co.

The PDF of the Mexican chapter can be downloaded aquí. More information on the publication can be found on The Law Reviews’ website, and the entire book can be downloaded as a PDF here.

For more information on NHG’s Insurance and Reinsurance practice, please visit our practice profile page.