(Corrects to $47 billion from $47 million, the remittances’ figure in paragraph 9)
By Valentine Hilaire
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexico’s Femsa, which controls one of the world’s largest Coca-Cola bottlers and a sprawling chain of Oxxo convenience stores, plans to wrap up a series of asset sales next year aimed at reducing debt, a company executive said.
The company this year sold its stakes in Dutch brewer Heineken and U.S. wholesaler Jetro Restaurant Depot. The businesses that remain to be unloaded represent about 10% of the company’s initial divestment plan to refocus on core businesses, Femsa’s head of investor relations Juan Fonseca told Reuters in an interview on Thursday.
Some warehousing operations as well as distribution, logistics and refrigeration businesses no longer fit into Femsa’s strategy and may be sold, Fonseca said.
Femsa’s shares have surged more than 40% this year after shedding 4.8% in 2022. Asset sales in 2023 have raised more than $7 billion.
Other Mexican companies have also moved to simplify their structure, by spinning off some businesses, such as broadcaster Televisa and conglomerate Alfa, although their shares have failed to respond as positively.
Femsa, which last year acquired Swiss kiosk operator Valora for $1.15 billion, plans to concentrate on its retail, bottling and financial technology (fintech) operations.
Femsa is capitalizing on the ubiquity of its Oxxo stores by promoting fintech services in them, such as digital accounts and debit cards, Fonseca said.
The company’s fintech business, called Spin, is set to reach 10 million clients by 2024 from about 8.8 million now, he said.
Another potential strategy for Spin could involve channeling Mexicans’ remittances from abroad, which hit $47 billion between January and September, through Spin’s accounts, Fonseca said.
Femsa posted a 9% drop in third-quarter net profit, citing the impact of strength in the Mexican peso, which Fonseca said could be offset in the near term by hedging.
Rising raw material and labor costs, prompted by yearly Mexican wage increases mandated by the government, are the two biggest challenges for Femsa’s growth, he said.
Femsa’s scale has allowed it to automate some processes, and it is looking for ways to cut energy costs, he said.
(Reporting by Valentine Hilaire; Editing by Christian Plumb and Rod Nickel)