Mexico Bonds, Cetes 0% 4sep2025, MXN (721D) (FIGI BBG01J7X1RR7, BI250904, MXBIGO000V29, WKN A4SGS8)
Domestic bonds, Zero-coupon bonds, Senior Unsecured
Domestic bonds, Zero-coupon bonds, Senior Unsecured
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Mexico is a country in North America and one of the largest economies in Latin America. Its capital is Mexico City, the official language is Spanish, and the national currency is the Mexican peso (MXN). The ...
Mexico is a country in North America and one of the largest economies in Latin America. Its capital is Mexico City, the official language is Spanish, and the national currency is the Mexican peso (MXN). The country has a diversified economy, with strong manufacturing, trade, services, energy, mining, and infrastructure sectors. Mexico's financial market is closely connected with global investors due to its open economy, proximity to the United States, and developed domestic capital market.
The Mexico bonds market is represented by government, corporate, financial, and infrastructure-related instruments. Debt securities are traded mainly through the Mexican Stock Exchange and institutional over-the-counter platforms. The local market is supported by a broad investor base, including banks, pension funds, insurance companies, investment funds, and foreign investors seeking exposure to peso-denominated fixed income. The Mexico government bond market is managed through the federal government's debt program, with securities issued in the domestic market and placed through regular auctions. Main instruments include Cetes, short-term zero-coupon Treasury certificates; Bonos M, fixed-rate development bonds; Bondes, floating-rate securities; and Udibonos, inflation-linked bonds denominated in investment units. Mexican government bonds are used as key benchmarks for the domestic yield curve, monetary policy expectations, and corporate debt pricing. The corporate segment includes issuers from banking, telecommunications, energy, infrastructure, real estate, and industrial sectors. Mexican bonds may be issued with fixed, floating, or inflation-linked coupons, depending on market conditions and investor demand. The country also remains active in international capital markets, where sovereign and corporate issuers place bonds in US dollars, euros, and other currencies. For international investors, Mexico bonds offer exposure to one of the most liquid local-currency debt markets among emerging economies. The market benefits from relatively strong financial infrastructure and regular sovereign issuance, while remaining sensitive to interest rates, inflation, exchange-rate movements, fiscal policy, and sovereign credit ratings. |
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Explore the most comprehensive database
1 000 000
bonds
80 234
stocks
175 910
ETF & Funds
70 000
indices
Track your portfolio in the most efficient way
full data on over 900 000 bonds, 80 000 stocks, 116 000 ETF & Funds; powerful bond screener; over 350 pricing sources among stock exchanges & OTC market; ratings & financial reports; user-friendly interface; available anywhere via Website, Excel Add-in and Mobile app.
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