Tuesday, April 29, 2025

June remittances up 25%; year to date they’re up 22%

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us currency

Remittance payments, the country’s most important source of foreign income, broke the US $4-billion mark for the fourth consecutive month in June and were up 25.5% for the month in annual terms.

The $4.44 billion was received through 11.301 million transactions.

The $23.61 billion received in remittance payments in the first six months of the year also represents the highest for the first half of any year, and was up 22.4% over last year.

The average remittance received was $393.

The president has previously described those who send foreign currency home from abroad as “heroes.”

Latin America economist at Goldman Sachs, Alberto Ramos, said U.S. policy was one key driver of the rise in remittance payments, as well as factors which reflect poorly on the Mexican economy. “The drivers of remittances from the United States result from the generous fiscal transfers to support wages and incomes in that country, the competitive level of the dollar against the Mexican peso, and the deep contraction of activity and employment in Mexico,” he said.

The Bank of México predicts that remittance payments will finish the year 21.7% higher than in 2020, at a total of around $49.4 billion.

With reports from El Economista and El Sol de México

CORRECTION: The numbers for June didn’t quite add up in the previous version of this story due to rounding. In addition, the total for the month was $4.44 billion, rather than $4.43 as first reported.

Guaymas: the pearl of the Sea of Cortés where I surrendered my heart

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Teta Kawi, 20 kilometers northwest of Guaymas.
Teta Kawi from a distance.

It is said that the word guaymas means “throwing arrows at the head” in Cahíta, the linguistic family encompassing the languages of the Yaqui and Mayo pueblos of Sonora.

Guaymas is where an airplane named Sonora threw bombs, by hand, at the federal warships that were striking down the Sonoran revolutionaries on May 30, 1913, during the first aeronaval attack in world history.  The heroic aircraft ended its days in Guadalajara — boneless, forgotten, with broken wings and rebaptized La Guajolota.

Guaymas is the ancestral land of the Guaimas people — a branch of the Seri (Comcaac) or “people of the sand” in Cahíta — who wore pelican feathers and skins and fished, hunted and gathered the fruits of the land. It was a pueblo band that survived surrounded by the Yaqui in the south, the Seri to the northwest and the Apache in the far north until they finally faded away, merging seamlessly with the Yaqui and Pimas Bajos in the 19th century.

Guaymas is located just 11 kilometers from Empalme’s police station, where Charlie Chaplin surreptitiously wed Lillita Louise MacMurray on November 24, 1924. The British actor was forced to marry after being threatened with scandal, and the law, by the mother of Spanish descent of a bride who had become pregnant at the tender age of just 15 and who had played the part of a “flirting angel” in Chaplin’s 1921 film, The Kid. A railroad love affair in Empalme, the unlikely junction of two paths.

I keep among my trinkets a copy of Charlie and Lillita’s marriage certificate, which for years accompanied the huge black-and-white photograph of the immortal mime — atop a fireplace I never ignited during my refuge as a lonely bachelor in Guaymas long, long ago.

The Sonora, Mexican Revolution
The biplane turned air bomber, The Sonora. During the Mexican Revolution, anti-government forces used it to drop explosives on their enemies from the air. Ministry of Culture

Guaymas is the desert, the sea, the sky; estuaries, bays, mangroves and sunrises and sunsets ignited by fire. It is the intertidal zone, where every day the sea and the land merge in a slow-motion waltz, somewhere between the highest and lowest tides. Guaymas is Estero Tastiota, Bacochibampo Bay, the Sleepy Lion, El Cochori, San Carlos Bay, Vícam, Pótam and Bay of Lobos.

Guaymas is Estero del Soldado, the protected area in San Carlos that’s a favorite home for American migrant birds that a band of brave university professors from the Tecnológico de Monterrey saved from certain death at the hands of unscrupulous developers — a fate that Estero Miramar could not escape because of the developers’ gluttony and because the professor’s band had dispersed.

Guaymas is the Teta Kawi (sometimes called Tetas de Cabra, or goat tits), the heart of an extinct volcano sculpted by the winds and shadows of time — tekalaim in the Yaqui language, the enormous tongue-shaped mountain of the serpent that breastfed us all.

Guaymas is Mexican giant cardón, saguaro, and jumping cholla cacti; ocotillo and elephant, mesquite, palo verde, ironwood and jito trees. It is the gila monsters, rattlesnakes, scorpions, Mexican bed bugs and yellow-bellied sea snake — the one that has a paddle tail to swim backward and forward.

Guaymas is fin whales, orcas, bottlenose dolphins, sea lions, leptocephalus larvae that slowly eat themselves as they grow old and skulls of undescribed pigmy beaked whales floating in bars on lonely beaches. And, of course, Guaymas is endearing amigos from both sides of the border and a white-headed British gentleman.

About 482 years ago, on September 14, 1539, Francisco de Ulloa arrived at Guaymas’ enchanting bay. The great Spanish navigator, explorer, and overachiever was the first person to sail the entire coast of the Baja California peninsula, only to be devoured by the waters of the Pacific Ocean in his ship, the Trinidad. He was the captain who baptized the Gulf of California first as the Vermillion Sea, then as Mar de Cortés in honor of Hernán, the conquistador and his boss.

Tetakawi Mountain
The extinct volcano Teta Kawi looms over San Carlos in Guaymas. deposit photos

Guaymas was founded as San José de Guaymas on August 31, 1669 by José de Gálvez y Gallardo, visitor-general of New Spain — he eventually became the Marqués de Sonora and Viscount of Sinaloa — who arrived in Sonora with the impossible mission of subjugating the indomitable Seri, Pima, Ópata, Sobaipuri and Apache.

The Spanish army came to Guaymas, seduced by the magnetic greed for pearls, gold and silver — invaders who tried time after time to take over the territory north of the Yaqui River.  These fair-skinned European invaders were repelled time after time by battle-hardened Yaquis, for whom the most precious possessions weren’t metals but their natural resources.

Guaymas was officially named the “Heroic City of Guaymas” in 1935 in honor of the memorable Battle of Guaymas on July 13, 1854, which defended the seaport from the insurrection of French residents who wanted to establish an independent republic of Sonora.

They were led by Gaston de Raousset-Boulbon, a French pirate who, after sailing the Atlantic in 1850 from Bordeaux to America, heading to Mexico, made a stopover in the Panamanian Caribbean while it was still part of Colombia. That was the Guaymas of then 2,000 inhabitants, made up of mostly European and South American emigrants who, with the Guaimas and Yaquis, joined the Mexican army to defeat the French and execute by firing squad the despicable Gaston.

In downtown Guaymas, 161 steps from the statue of El Pescador, that giant fisherman who sits gazing at the horizon in case a foreign enemy dare invade again, is the heart of the only Plaza of the Three Presidents in the entire world: Guaymas-born Plutarco Elías Calles, Adolfo de la Huerta and Abelardo L. Rodríguez. Both the fisherman and the presidents’ statues were made by the Spanish-born nationalized Mexican Julián Martínez Soros.

Offshore, 2,000 meters deep, the Guaymas Basin bubbles forth primordial ooze from one of the greatest abysses of the Gulf of California, where, inch by inch, new sea floor is being built as I write this essay.

Yaqui battalion
Yaqui battalion as part of the Ejército Constitucionalista, Sonora, July 1899. Casasola/INAH National Photo Library

Guaymas is the “Barca de Guaymas,” the most nostalgic song ever sung about the coastal port where John Steinbeck and Ed Rickets anchored on April 5, 1940, during their epic voyage onboard the boat Western Flyer, their adventures immortalized in the book Log from the Sea of Cortez, the narrative of two seagoing apprentices escaping debts, love affairs gone bad and evil gossiping tongues.

Upon arriving in Guaymas on August 2, 1979, 42 years ago today, I burned my ships. I’m Colombian by birth, Mexican by adoption and guaymense by heart. Here I surrendered to the sea, and here I found true love.

Here, at the Pearl of the Sea of Cortés.

To Patricia, Pía, Omar

Omar Vidal, a scientist, was a university professor in Mexico, is a former senior officer at the UN Environment Program and former director-general of the World Wildlife Fund-Mexico.

Coming soon: Bienestar Gasoline; new stations will carry ‘well-being’ brand

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The new gas stations will be operated as Pemex franchises.
The new gas stations will be operated as Pemex franchises.

The federal government is set to announce the construction of a chain of state-owned gas stations along the route of the Maya Train railroad.

Pemex, the National Institute of Social Economy and the National Tourism Promotion Fund (Fonatur) will announce on Tuesday the construction of gas stations to be known as Gasolineras del Bienestar, or Well-Being gas stations, the newspaper El Universal reported.

The new gas stations on the 1,500-kilometer-long Maya Train route through Chiapas, Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo will be built in conjunction with community landowners and local authorities. Federal authorities have already begun discussions with ejido (agricultural cooperative) authorities and visited potential construction sites.

The first Bienestar stations will be built in the south of Quintana Roo. One community likely to get one is Sergio Butrón Casas, a sugar cane growing community 30 kilometers west of Chetumal and just north of the border with Belize.

The aim of the stations will be to strengthen the “social and caring economy,” El Universal said. The number to be built is expected to be announced tomorrow.

Gabriel Guillermo Arellano Aguilar, a deputy director of Fonatur, which is building the Maya Train, said last month that the communities in which new gas stations are built will be responsible for managing them.

“[It’s] our commitment to provide support to them to guarantee their success,” he said.

The state oil company will supply fuel to the Bienestar stations, which will be Pemex franchises, albeit with a different name. Construction of the new stations will help boost the state company’s participation in the retail fuel market.

Out of almost 13,000 gas stations in Mexico, more than 7,200 operate under the Pemex brand but the company’s sales have declined in recent years as more private companies have entered the market.

President López Obrador announced last month that the state oil company would create a new division to be called Gas Bienestar to distribute LP gas directly to consumers.

With reports from El Universal 

Potholes are bigger worry for citizens than security: López Obrador

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Potholes in Mexico City
Potholes in Mexico City: of greater concern than crime.

The president announced a nationwide plan to repair potholes during Monday’s press conference in response to a question about the security situation in Mexico.

A journalist challenged the president on security and presented data published by the federal statistics agency Inegi indicating that 66.6% of adults feel that living in their cities is unsafe.

But the president pointed to other Inegi data: 75.9% of respondents believe the main problem in their cities is potholes, while 58.5% listed street lighting as an issue.

Crimes such as robberies, extortion and kidnappings appeared as the fourth highest concern, at 56.7% in March and 56.2% in June.

“Soon we’re going to run a special program for potholes [in cities] all over the country. We are going get agreement with state governments, with municipal governments, because it is the main problem for the people who live in the cities,” the president said.

“Look what is in first place: potholes in the streets … We’re going to allocate a special budget,” he added.

As for security, the president attributed high rates of homicide to the mistakes of his predecessors.

Earlier in the conference, which took place in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Governor Enrique Alfaro Ramírez revealed that homicides had increased 20.6% in the state in the first six months of 2021 compared to the same period in 2018.

Of the 1,492 murders reported in the first half of the year, 194 of the victims were found in clandestine graves and 1,296 were victims of direct attacks. Alfaro added that 81% of the murders were related to organized crime.

Jalisco is the base of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which is arguably the most powerful organized crime group in the country.

With reports from Reforma

Searching mothers plea for cartel truce to allow search of ‘extermination camp’

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Forensics investigators search for bodies
Forensics investigators search for bodies at La Bartolina, Tamaulipas.

Mothers of missing children in Tamaulipas have issued a plea to the Gulf Cartel to allow them to search for their loved ones’ remains in an “extermination camp” near the border city of Matamoros.

The Tamaulipas Union of Collectives of Searching Mothers sought a “truce” from the criminal organization, which is based in the northern border state, to allow them to enter a property in an area called La Bartolina, located about 25 kilometers east of Matamoros.

“We’re not looking for culprits, we’re looking for our children, fathers, mothers, siblings and [other] relatives,” the group said in a statement.

The mothers and other relatives of missing people said they intend to stage a protest at the property to demand that authorities exhume and identify buried remains and turn them over to their families.

“As the good human beings we are, we appeal to your compassion and good heart so that you allow us to go the La Bartolina property in your city to demand that the authorities of the three levels of government do the necessary work to start to exhume the remains that they find [there],” the union of collectives said.

Signed by members of 200 families of missing people, the statement was directed to the leader of the Gulf Cartel faction known as the Cyclones of Matamoros.

They described not knowing the whereabouts of their missing loved ones as “endless torture” that is too much to bear.

The statement called on the Cyclones to respond to the request via a narco-banner, several of which were hung in public places in Tamaulipas cities last week to announce a truce between three feuding factions of the Gulf Cartel.

“… We’re relatives of missing people who just want to know if our family members are at La Bartolina; we’ll tie a white kerchief to our left elbows and carry white flags as a sign of peace,” it said.

The head of the National Search Commission said last month that federal and state authorities have been recovering remains from the site since 2017.

“Since 2017 to May 28 [of 2021] at least 500 kilograms of charred bone remains have been recovered,” Karla Quintana said.

The federal government recently acknowledged that the property operated as an effective extermination camp for the notoriously violent Gulf Cartel between 2009 and 2016. The army first detected in April 2016 that it had been used as a location to torture, kill, burn and bury kidnapping victims.

Despite the recovery of hundreds of kilograms of human remains, the family members of missing people evidently believe that more body parts are located at La Bartolina. The fact that the Tamaulipas collectives directed their statement to the Gulf Cartel’s dominant faction in Matamoros, rather than authorities, is testament to the power the criminal group holds.

Federal authorities accuse state Governor Francisco García Cabeza de Vaca of having ties to organized crime but have been unable to take him into custody due to his immunity from prosecution in Tamaulipas.

With reports from Milenio and Animal Político 

Mexico wins gold in international math competition

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Gold medal winner Rodrigo Saldívar.
Gold medal winner Rodrigo Saldívar.

Mexico has won a gold medal in mathematics for the second time at the International Mathematics Competition (IMC).

Elementary school student Rodrigo Saldivar Mauricio, 11, from Zacatecas won the gold in an individual competition.

The tournament was organized by Indonesia, but took place remotely from July 27 to August 1 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The country was originally destined to host the 2020 competition, but it was postponed.

Sixteen Mexican competitors also won four silver medals and nine bronze medals spread across team and individual contests, and the country was awarded an honorable mention.

Mexico won gold for the first time at the IMC in 2019 when it was held in South Africa. That year primary school student Mateo Iván Latapí Acosta from Mexico City took a gold medal, which prompted organizers to recognize the country as an “emerging mathematical powerhouse.”

The competition consists of two parallel contests: the IWYMIC (Invitational World Youth Mathematics Intercity Competition) for high school students and the EMIC (Elementary Mathematics International Contest), for elementary school pupils. In 2010, Mexico was invited to participate for the first time in the IWYMIC. This year, the country participated in the EMIC for the fourth time.

In both contests two exams are presented: one individual and one team exam. Each team is made up of four members.

Two high school and two elementary school teams from Mexico took part, among 304 primary and 284 secondary school children from 30 countries including China, South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, Vietnam and Hong Kong.
The exams present challenges that correspond to the basic high school curriculum: algebra, arithmetic, counting and geometry.

Meanwhile, a Zapotec teenager also triumphed last month at the World Innovative Science Fair organized by Indonesia, with a short film about chauvinism.

With reports from Milenio and Radio Fórmula

Controls bring LP gas prices down nearly 11% on average

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gas truck
Prices were down 24% in Mexico City.

Liquefied petroleum gas prices have fallen almost 11% on average after the Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) published price ceilings for 145 regions across Mexico.

The CRE set maximum prices for the gas used by most Mexican households for cooking after the Energy Ministry (Sener) directed it to do so last week.

It was undeterred by a warning from Mexico’s antitrust regulator, the Federal Economic Competition Commission (Cofece), that the Sener directive was illegal because the Hydrocarbons Law establishes that the market determines gas prices and they can only be fixed if it is determined there is a lack of competition.

The average cost of gas fell 10.87% compared to the first fortnight of June after the CRE published price ceilings on Saturday.

CRE data shows that a kilogram of LP gas cost 25.94 pesos (about US $1.30) on average in the first half of June while the average price on Sunday was 23.12 pesos.

There was a 24.1% reduction in price in Mexico City, with a kilogram of gas selling for 21.33 pesos on average yesterday compared to 28.11 pesos in the first half of June.

The Mexican Employers Federation (Coparmex) noted in a statement that the price ceilings were published despite Cofece not having determined the existence of monopoly pricing practices in the gas market. Cofece began an investigation on May 31 to determine whether such practices were occurring but has not concluded its probe.

Coparmex also said that the ceilings established by the CRE and endorsed by the National Commission for Regulatory Improvement (Conamer) could have an irreversible negative impact on investment and the participation of new investors in the sector, “which plays against the urgently [needed] economic recovery and the competitiveness of the country.”

It said Conamer hastily approved the price ceilings set by the CRE without conducting an analysis of the impact and a public consultation process.

“… Sener asked the CRE to issue a very complex pricing policy in just three days, which places the quality of the regulation at risk and doesn’t allow the content to be enriched by the voices of experts on the issue,” Coparmex added.

To bring gas prices down, “more efficient alternatives” outlined in the Hydrocarbons Law, such as subsidies, should be applied, the employers’ group said.

Publication of the price ceilings comes almost a month after President López Obrador announced that the government would create a new state-owned company to distribute LP gas directly to customers.

He blamed five large distribution companies for “unjustifiably” raising gas prices above inflation and asserted that the new firm, to be called Gas Bienestar (Well-Being Gas), will sell the essential fuel at fair prices.

With reports from Milenio and El Universal 

A growing network of cable cars paints the skies over Valley of México

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Cablebús cabins carry passengers over Mexico City.
Cablebús cabins carry passengers over Mexico City.

In the Valley of México, home to more than 20 million people, almost 25 kilometers of cable car lines now form part of the skyline.

Two cable cars, soon to be three, transport thousands of passengers from elevated areas to more central, better connected locations.

Development of cable car lines shows no sign of abating: another line is under construction, and two more are under consideration.

In the north of Mexico City, the new Cablebús system has introduced the airborne transport. Line 1 went into full operation on June 11, connecting the Gustavo A. Madero borough to the Indios Verdes Metro and bus station. It has registered 56,000 users per day compared to the 48,000 predicted, which makes it the second most used cable car in Latin America, even by pre-pandemic numbers, according to city officials.

Line 2 of the Cablebús will be put into service in a matter of days. At 10.2 kilometres, with 308 cabins, the line will be the longest in Latin America and will connect residents in Iztapalapa to the Metro stations of Santa Marta and Constitución de 1917.

The first cable car in the Valley of México was the Mexicable in October 2016, north of the capital in Ecatepec, state of México. The line has seven stations and 185 cabins and runs over the Mexico-Pachuca highway, to the neighborhood of La Cañada.

A new 8.2-kilometer line is under construction in Ecatepec, which is 70% complete. Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum has stated that there is discussion about a new cable car service in the west of Mexico City in Naucalpan and another in the southwest of the city to connect the neighborhoods of Magdalena Contreras and Tlalpan.

When the first section of Line 1 of the Cablebús was opened on March 4, Sheinbaum attested to the social benefit the form of transport would provide. “It’s a historic day because we’re opening a new system of collective transport … it’s social transport … Having the best transportation for the poorest parts of the city reduces inequality,” she said.

However, sustainable development expert at Tec de Monterrey university, Mariajulia Martínez Acosta, urged caution on transportation infrastructure, saying that all options should be considered. “They [cable cars] are in vogue … they are solving very immediate mobility problems, but in the long term we do not know if it will really have a positive impact, or if in a year only one person will travel per cabin,” she said.

“I think it would be good to know the cost-benefit analysis of increasing the cable car network … Yes they are a solution, they promote mobility and bring [elevated] neighborhoods closer, but it’s not all about having the skyline full of cable cars. We should look at which transportation options can have the greatest impact. I understand that developing a cable car is cheaper than a Metro line, but the impact that a Metro network can have is greater,” she added.

With reports from Forbes México

Active Covid case numbers soared to 137,000 on Saturday, well over previous highs

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Covid case numbers increased 212% in July.
Covid case numbers increased 212% in July.

The estimated number of active coronavirus cases is at a near record high as the third wave of the pandemic continues to grow across Mexico.

There were 131,632 active cases as of Sunday, according to Health Ministry estimates, down from a record high of 137,777 on Saturday. Transmission of the highly contagious Delta strain of the virus is fueling the high numbers.

Estimated active cases exceeded 100,000 at the height of the second and worst wave of the pandemic in late 2020 and early 2021 but didn’t rise as high as their current level. They rose 16% over the week to Sunday, the Health Ministry reported, adding that they account for 4.4% of all cases since the beginning of the pandemic.

Mexico City easily has the highest number of active cases with 36,531, or almost 28% of the total. México state ranks second with 12,749 followed by Jalisco, 7,246; Nuevo León, 7,191; Veracruz, 4,973; Tabasco, 3,588; and Quintana Roo, 3,583.

Health authorities reported 328,983 confirmed cases in July, the second highest monthly total of the pandemic after January, during which almost 440,000 were detected. Case numbers increased 212% last month compared to June but Covid-19 deaths – 7,859 were reported in July – were 17% lower.

At the national level, there is still significant capacity to treat Covid-19 patients with 46% of general care beds and 38% of those with ventilators currently occupied. However, federal data shows that hospitals in some states are under significant pressure.

Just over 95% of general care beds set aside for Covid patients are taken in Colima, while Mexico City, Nayarit, Durango and Guerrero all have rates above 70%. More than 95% of beds with ventilators are also occupied in Colima, while Nayarit, Oaxaca, Nuevo León and Sinaloa have rates above 60%.

Mexico’s accumulated case tally currently stands at 2.85 million while the official death toll – widely considered a significant undercount – is 241,034, the fourth highest total in the world.

Although Mexico only ranks behind the United States, Brazil and India for Covid deaths, President López Obrador declared Friday that the country is not among the worst affected by the pandemic. He pointed out that Mexico ranks sixth in the Americas for its per capita Covid death rate.

Above Mexico, which has recorded 188.9 deaths per 100,000 people according to mortality data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, are Peru (which ranks first in the world with 604.2 deaths per 100,000 people), Brazil, Colombia, Argentina and Paraguay.

López Obrador also claimed that Mexico ranks second in the Americas for vaccination rates and is one of the “countries of the world with the most vaccines administered.” However, those assertions don’t stack up.

covid patient
Hospitals in some states are feeling increasing pressure.

About 67.35 million shots have been administered in Mexico since vaccination began late last year and 53% of adults have received at least one dose, according to the latest Health Ministry data.

But The New York Times vaccinations tracker shows that Mexico ranks 70th in the world for doses given per 100 people. Ahead of Mexico are 13 Western Hemisphere countries: Uruguay, Chile, Canada, the United States, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, El Salvador, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Panama and Colombia.

As a percentage of Mexico’s entire population of just over 126 million, only 20% of people are fully vaccinated while 37% have received at least one shot. The rates are 49% and 57%, respectively, in the United States and 60% and 72% in Canada.

Data shows that millions of people across several age groups in Mexico remain unvaccinated despite having had the opportunity to get a shot.

Vaccination has now extended to people in the 18-29 age bracket in some parts of the country, and strong demand was evident in Mexico City last week with young adults flocking to vaccination centers. In the northern borough of Gustavo A. Madero, thousands of people waited for up to three hours to get a shot. However, some people were turned away despite claiming they lived in the borough because their voter ID showed an address outside Gustavo A. Madero.

Meanwhile, an internal document from the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) obtained by The Washington Post stated that the Delta variant appears to cause more serious illness than other strains and spreads as easily as chickenpox.

Citing unpublished data, the document also said that vaccinated people infected with the Delta strain – which was first detected in India late last year – may be able to pass on the virus just as easily as unvaccinated individuals.

“Vaccinated people infected with Delta have measurable viral loads similar to those who are unvaccinated and infected with the variant,” the Post said, citing the CDC document.

Despite the growing dominance of the Delta strain around the world, Mexico didn’t tighten restrictions on incoming travelers, who can enter the country without having to show a negative Covid test or proof of vaccination and without having to go into quarantine upon arrival.

Among the states that have recently seen sharp increases in case numbers are Quintana Roo and Baja California Sur, where popular beach destinations such as Cancún, Playa del Carmen and Los Cabos are located.

UPDATE: The Coahuila state government announced it had downgraded its coronavirus stoplight designation from green to yellow as of Monday after new cases put increased pressure on hospitals.

With reports from Reforma, EFE and The Washington Post

The Mexico-based fintech that decided to buy a bank

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Apoj, left and Poritz of Credijusto.
Apoj, left and Poritz of Credijusto.

In the six years since launching Credijusto, a Mexican fintech lending to small businesses, David Poritz and Allan Apoj delivered more than 250% annual revenue growth and managed to turn Covid-19 into an opportunity.

But when the co-chief executives decided to go mainstream by buying a bank, even one of their biggest backers baulked.

Hernán Kazah, co-founder of Latin America’s biggest venture capital firm, Kaszek, feared the purchase of Banco Finterra could cause the duo to lose focus. Or as he puts it: “When David and Allan said they were buying a bank, I thought they were mad.”

Poritz, a 32-year-old U.S. anthropologist-turned-entrepreneur with a masters in public policy from the University of Oxford, smiles at the irony: “Fintechs were created to disrupt the banking sector,” he says. And yet, in June, Credijusto spent an undisclosed sum under US $50 million to become a bank itself.

For them, it proved their core belief that after successfully challenging the stodgy financial establishment from the outside, they can now change it from within.

Like Credijusto, Finterra targets the nearly 5 million small and medium-sized companies that make up half of Mexico’s gross domestic product and employ 70% of workers, but struggle to access credit. But Credijusto’s unique selling point is the way it crunches electronic invoice, tax and other data to grant customers loans within hours.

Kazah had been concerned that the price tag would be too high “and there could be surprises under the rug” but Poritz and Apoj stuck to their guns. They had begun evaluating whether to apply for a banking charter to take their business to the next level.

That can take years, though. When Finterra came up for sale in 2019, “we chose to buy rather than to build a bank from scratch — it’s faster and we saw a lot of alignment,” says Apoj, 31, a Mexican economics graduate who cut his teeth as an entrepreneur during a year out from college.

The goal now is “to have the speed and flexibility of a fintech service with the costs a bank is able to provide,” Apoj adds. At present, their lowest interest rate is 7.5% and with Finterra, “we can now be financially competitive with any major bank.”

In addition, with combined assets of $300 million “this [acquisition] doubles our size . . . It positions us for a lot of growth,” he says.

Mexico has 51 banks but just a handful grant most of the country’s loans. Even successful entrepreneurs such as Poritz and Apoj, who grew Credijusto’s revenues more than 250% every year from the company’s inception in 2015 to 2019, have been turned down for personal credit cards — something Apoj says was “symptomatic of a financial system where it’s so hard to access services.”

credijusto

Market concentration has left a funding gap for SMEs amounting to more than $160 billion, according to the World Bank, the International Finance Corporation and the SME Finance Forum.

“The SME segment has really been left behind,” says Poritz. “We want to build the first truly digital banking solution for SMEs.”

Credijusto has already issued some $500 million to $600 million in loans and aims to double the two companies’ combined client base to 12,000 by the end of this year, with a particular focus on the agricultural sector, which is poorly served by banks.

Within a fortnight of the Finterra purchase, the still-to-be-named combined entity launched a credit card in partnership with American Express offering buy-now-pay-later services of up to five months and integrated digital financial planning tools to make operations for small companies nimbler and cheaper.

The pair, who met at Brown University in the U.S. in 2008 — in Apoj’s first week — are not shy of taking risks. In the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, they launched a revolving, mortgage-backed credit line which proved a lifeline for restaurants. President López Obrador offered small businesses loans worth a little over $1,000 but little other pandemic help.

Credijusto also clinched a deal with Uber Eats to become the delivery service’s exclusive financial partner in Latin America, enabling businesses on Uber Eats’ platform to have access to speedy loans.

“Covid helped prove our business model in a very unexpected way,” says Poritz. “We were able to navigate Covid very well and validate our business in a much shorter time.” Indeed, even during the pandemic, revenues have grown an “incredibly respectable” 30% and Apoj says delinquent loans were “not as bad as they could have been.”

That has been music to the ears of the A-list venture capitalists and funds — including Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse, Point72 Ventures, New Residential Investment Corp, QED Investors and John Mack, as well as Kaszek — who have poured in some $400 million in debt and equity.

“Capital on its own doesn’t make a business successful, but institutional capital in Mexico is a major differentiator that has enabled us to grow in scale,” says Poritz.

Mexico has long lagged other Latin American countries in terms of “unicorns” — start-ups worth more than $1 billion.

But since October last year, it has amassed three, and Credijusto has set its sights on joining them — something the duo see as validating their success in building what Poritz calls a “high growth, high impact business that truly solves a major pain point.”

banco finterra

Three questions for David Poritz and Allan Apoj

Poritz

Who is your leadership hero?

Josef Mittlemann, a successful developer, taught leadership at Brown. We used to go on 90-minute cycle rides. He was a really important leadership coach at a really pivotal time just as I was graduating from college.

What is the most important leadership lesson you have learned?

If you communicate clearly and manage expectations, 90% of friction and conflict can be avoided.

What would you be doing if you were not working at Credijusto?

I’d have split my time between academia and the non-profit world.

Apoj

Who is your leadership hero?

Barack Obama defended his healthcare plans, saying it was important not to let the perfect be the enemy of the good. A lot of people in tech are purists — if you aim for perfection, it often slows innovation.

What is the most important leadership lesson you have learned?

If you don’t like something, say so very quickly. I’ve learned you’ve sometimes got to pull the plug.

What would you be doing if you were not working at Credijusto?

I’d have gone to law school — it’s the best gateway to business. I always wanted to work in finance.

Apoj, who is in charge of tech and internal operations, while Poritz manages investor relations and finance, already sees international expansion on the horizon, with loans to small businesses further up North America’s integrated supply chains in the U.S. and Canada, as a big driver of growth.

Being friends as well as business partners has been a bonus. “When you’re in the trenches of a start-up, you need to do it with someone you enjoy being with,” says Poritz. “But to say we always agree isn’t the case.”

One disagreement, in fact, held the company back by more than a year, he says. “I made a bit of a tactical error. Allan wanted to create a multi-product business from the beginning. I was of the view we needed to be focused on a small number of products,” says Poritz. “I was too conservative.”

Apoj, in turn, regrets “not pulling the trigger sooner” on some unsuitable hires, something he said ended up taking two years off the company’s technical development. But the pair were in their mid-20s and inexperienced, and “we were not confident making those decisions in the early days.”

As a result, the pair have evolved into what they call “hypercommunicators.”

“We’re really, really open with staff,” says Poritz.

Both men dabbled in other entrepreneurial ventures before Credijusto. Poritz founded Equitable Origin, a non-profit focusing on indigenous rights, and is still its president. While at Brown, Apoj took a year out to design a healthier landfill solution for a tender in Ecuador. He ultimately lost, but recalls it as a “great experience.”

Now, the quest is to become “THE neobank for SMEs,” Poritz says.

Or as Apoj puts it: “There’s tonnes still to build.”

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