Mexico's National Banking and Securities Commission published a press release highlighting the authorization of several capital markets transactions by Aeroméxico, Esentia Energy Development and FIBRA NEXT, presenting them as signals of rising issuer activity and growing participation by domestic and international investors in Mexico’s securities market. Aeroméxico rang the bell at the Mexican Stock Exchange as part of a mixed global public offering with domestic and international distribution. Esentia Energy Development completed its initial placement after obtaining registration of its equity shares, bringing a significant portion of its share capital to market to support its growth strategy in industrial regions; the company operates in natural gas transportation and marketing. In industrial real estate, FIBRA NEXT completed a global follow-on offer that added more than 73 million real estate trust certificates (CBFIs) to the vehicle, supporting the build-out of a portfolio of more than 200 strategically located properties. The CNBV also reminded the market that registrations in the National Securities Registry are declaratory and do not certify an issuer’s solvency or credit quality, and that investors should rely on offering prospectuses and disclosed risk factors; related documents are available via the placing intermediaries, the relevant exchanges and the CNBV’s portal.
Mexico Comision Nacional Bancaria y de Valores (CNBV) 2025-12-04
Mexico's National Banking and Securities Commission authorizes Aeroméxico, Esentia and FIBRA NEXT offerings as issuance activity picks up
Mexico's National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV) authorized capital markets transactions by Aeroméxico, Esentia Energy Development, and FIBRA NEXT, indicating increased issuer activity and investor participation in Mexico's securities market. Aeroméxico conducted a mixed global public offering, Esentia Energy completed its initial equity placement, and FIBRA NEXT executed a global follow-on offer. The CNBV reiterated that National Securities Registry registrations are declaratory and do not guarantee issuer solvency.