One furniture store in Monterrey, one 1993 broadcast privatization, one bank inside every store, one ~$2.5B sale to AT&T — and 120 years of Mexican family-holding capital allocation, on one filterable page.
Grupo Salinas is the umbrella name for the family-controlled Mexican conglomerate anchored by Grupo Elektra (BMV: ELEKTRA) and TV Azteca (BMV: AZTECACPO), with private holdings including Banco Azteca, Total Play Telecomunicaciones, and adjacent real-estate and financial interests. It was founded in 1906 in Monterrey by Benjamin Salinas Westrup as a small furniture-manufacturing and retail store, expanded through the mid-20th century into consumer electronics and appliances under Hugo Salinas Rocha, and was inherited in 1987 by Ricardo Salinas Pliego, then age 31, following the death of his father. Under Ricardo, the group executed the transformational sequence that defines its modern shape: the 1993 IPO of Grupo Elektra on the Mexican Stock Exchange, the July 1993 privatization of state broadcaster Imevision (which became TV Azteca) at approximately $645M, the 1997 acquisition of mobile carrier Iusacell (later sold to AT&T in January 2015 for approximately $2.5B), the October 2002 founding of Banco Azteca as a full-license Mexican bank operating inside the Elektra retail footprint, the 2011 launch of Total Play as a fiber-to-home broadband and pay-TV operator, and international expansions across Central and South America and briefly into the US consumer-finance market (Advance America / Purpose Financial). This page catalogs the material record from the 1906 Monterrey founding through today — the specialty-retail buildout, the broadcast privatization, the underbanked-consumer-credit thesis that produced Banco Azteca and ~19M+ depositors, the mobile-carrier experiment and its 2015 exit, the fiber telecom build and its 2023-2024 bond restructuring, and the ongoing Mexican SAT tax disputes that punctuate the modern era. This is the natural companion to the Institute's FEMSA acquisitions record (the other Monterrey-founded family-controlled Mexican conglomerate), LVMH (the French luxury-family archetype for founder-controlled compounders), and Bollore (the French family-holding archetype for concentrated long-duration bets). It is intentionally a living reference. Nothing here is investment advice. Everything here is a fact-checkable practitioner reference for a very specific question — what does 120 years of Mexican family-holding capital allocation actually look like in list form?
Grupo Salinas is the archetype of the founder-controlled Mexican EM conglomerate. The business begins in 1906 in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, when Benjamin Salinas Westrup opens a furniture-manufacturing and retail store called Salinas y Rocha. Through the mid-20th century Hugo Salinas Rocha builds out consumer-electronics and appliance retail. The modern group takes shape only after Ricardo Salinas Pliego inherits control in 1987 at age 31, following the death of his father. Ricardo's central operating insight — the strategic thesis that unifies every downstream decision — is that the vast majority of Mexican households sit outside the traditional banking system, buy durable goods in cash or on unstructured credit, and can be served profitably by a retailer that combines merchandise, in-house credit, and (later) a full-license bank inside the same store footprint.
1993 is the founding year of the modern group. In a single twelve-month window Ricardo executes two transformational transactions: the initial public offering of Grupo Elektra on the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores in April, and the July 1993 privatization bidding for state broadcaster Imevision, which Salinas's Radio Televisora del Centro consortium wins at approximately $645M against competing Mexican and international bids. Imevision becomes TV Azteca (BMV: AZTECACPO), Mexico's second-largest broadcast television network, with flagship channels Azteca 13 (later Azteca Uno) and Azteca 7. The financing of the TV Azteca bid becomes controversial: a portion is provided by Raul Salinas de Gortari, brother of then-Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, and the loan generates a decade-plus of legal dispute finally resolved in the early 2000s.
Banco Azteca is the strategic core. In October 2002 Grupo Elektra opens Banco Azteca, the first new full Mexican banking license issued in nearly a decade. Banco Azteca operates inside Elektra stores, staffs each branch with credit officers who assess borrowers on the same visit as the merchandise purchase, and delivers small-ticket unsecured consumer credit to a customer base that traditional Mexican banks had never served. The bank grows to approximately 19M+ depositors by the mid-2020s and becomes the primary economic engine of Grupo Elektra. The 2008 attempted Advance America (US payday) acquisition, subsequent 2012 consolidation, and the eventual reorganization under Purpose Financial extend the underbanked-consumer-credit thesis into the US market.
The Iusacell arc is the group's largest failed-then-monetized experiment. Grupo Salinas acquires Iusacell in 1997 as its bet on the Mexican mobile telecom market. Iusacell (later merged with Unefon, which Salinas separately founded in 1998) struggles for a decade and a half in a market dominated by Carlos Slim's America Movil / Telcel. An attempted 2008 merger with Nextel Mexico fails to close. Finally, in November 2014, Grupo Salinas announces the sale of Iusacell to AT&T for approximately $2.5B enterprise value including assumed debt; the sale closes in January 2015 and is one of the largest single monetization events in group history. AT&T subsequently acquires Nextel Mexico and integrates both under the AT&T Mexico brand.
2011-2024 is the Total Play era. In 2011 Grupo Salinas launches Total Play Telecomunicaciones as a greenfield fiber-to-the-home broadband and pay-TV operator, in direct competition with Slim's Telmex and Televisa's izzi Telecom. Total Play executes an aggressive rollout funded significantly through USD-denominated high-yield bond issuance. By 2023-2024 the company undertakes a distressed liability-management exercise on its 2025 and 2028 bonds, exchanging debt at discounts and extending maturities. In parallel, Ricardo Salinas Pliego becomes an outspoken public advocate for Bitcoin from approximately 2020, participating informally in the discourse around El Salvador's 2021 Bitcoin adoption and the Bukele administration's proposed Bitcoin-bond ('Volcano bond'). The group's SAT (Mexican tax authority) disputes — long-running across the 2010s and 2020s — remain in various stages of litigation and represent an ongoing legal-and-financial overhang worth reading alongside the operational record.
Seven strategic observations across 120 years of Grupo Salinas capital allocation, with particular focus on the modern Ricardo Salinas Pliego era.
(a) The underbanked-consumer thesis is the strategic core. Every material Grupo Salinas transaction since 1987 traces back to a single operating insight: the majority of Mexican households sit outside the traditional banking system, and a retailer that combines merchandise, in-house credit, and (from 2002) a full-license bank inside the same store footprint captures economics that neither pure retailers nor pure banks can reach. Elektra is the acquisition channel. Banco Azteca is the credit and deposit engine. TV Azteca is the marketing infrastructure. Total Play is the digital-services extension. The thesis is unusually singular for a group of this size; where FEMSA runs multi-vertical portfolios (Coca-Cola FEMSA, OXXO, Heineken minority, spec chem), Grupo Salinas has stayed structurally focused on one customer-cohort thesis expressed across multiple product surfaces.
(b) Founder control preserved through direct family ownership. Unlike the LVMH Arnault architecture or the Bollore Rivaud cascade, Grupo Salinas maintains family control primarily through direct family holdings in Grupo Elektra and TV Azteca, plus private ownership of Total Play and Banco Azteca (Banco Azteca is a subsidiary of Elektra). The umbrella name 'Grupo Salinas' is a brand rather than a listed entity. Free-float minorities exist at Elektra and TV Azteca but the family retains effective operational control at both. This structure is simpler than the European cascade equivalents but comparable to other founder-controlled Latin American conglomerates.
(c) Opportunistic buildout at privatization windows. The single most consequential transaction in group history — the 1993 TV Azteca / Imevision privatization — was won at a moment when the Mexican federal government was systematically privatizing state assets under Carlos Salinas de Gortari's reform program. Ricardo Salinas Pliego was thirty-seven, had inherited control only six years earlier, and had just IPO'd Elektra. Winning Imevision at approximately $645M against multinational competitors was the transaction that put Grupo Salinas on the Mexican corporate map. The pattern repeats in adjacent forms: Iusacell (1997) was acquired at a moment of Mexican telecom-sector distress; Banco Azteca's license (2002) came at a moment of Mexican banking-sector rebuilding after the 1994-95 Tequila Crisis; Total Play (2011) launched into a Mexican telecom market that had just been forced open by regulatory action against America Movil.
(d) Willingness to attempt cross-border extensions. Where FEMSA and Grupo Bimbo pursued international expansion in a disciplined single-country cadence, Grupo Salinas has pursued a wider range of cross-border experiments: Elektra stores in Central and South America (Guatemala, Honduras, Peru, Argentina, others), the 2008 attempted Advance America US payday-lending acquisition, the later Purpose Financial US consumer-finance vehicle, Azteca America as a US Spanish-language broadcast affiliate network. The record is mixed — several of these extensions were subsequently rationalized, sold, or wound down — but the group's willingness to test cross-border strategy is a distinctive feature.
(e) Concentrated exits at cyclical peaks. The Iusacell sale to AT&T (January 2015, ~$2.5B) is the paradigmatic example of the group selling a struggling operating asset at a cyclical peak in acquirer appetite. AT&T was aggressively building a cross-border North American wireless footprint and offered a premium price for Iusacell's spectrum and 8.6M subscribers that would have been unattainable through organic operating improvement. The Advance America / Purpose Financial transitions and the wind-down of certain international Elektra retail footprints follow a similar logic: monetize or exit when the acquirer or restructuring counterparty offers a better outcome than continued operation.
(f) Media as marketing infrastructure, not standalone platform. TV Azteca has always been operated in part as the marketing infrastructure of Grupo Salinas rather than as a pure-play media asset. Its programming (Big Brother Mexico, La Academia, telenovelas, sports) reaches the exact demographic that Elektra and Banco Azteca serve; its advertising inventory has been used strategically to promote group offerings; its Azteca America US broadcast affiliate network extended the audience-reach thesis into the US Hispanic market. The strategic logic is closer to the Rupert Murdoch / Sky television-as-distribution model than to a standalone broadcast operator. The 2020s content-and-streaming pivot at TV Azteca is a continuation of the same logic in the digital era.
(g) Willingness to carry litigation and regulatory risk. Grupo Salinas entities have been in continuous litigation and regulatory dispute with counterparties, the SEC (2005-06), Mexican SAT (long-running), and various commercial disputants for decades. The group's stance has generally been to litigate rather than settle quickly, use the full available appeals process, and accept the reputational cost of public disputes in exchange for defending disputed positions on the merits. This is a distinctive feature of the group's operating culture and one worth reading alongside the deal record; several of the disputes have material financial implications that are difficult to size externally.
Every material Grupo Salinas acquisition, divestiture, strategic investment, joint venture, spinoff, and platform launch from the 1906 Monterrey furniture-store founding through today, anchored by the 1987 Ricardo Salinas Pliego succession, the 1993 Elektra IPO and TV Azteca privatization (~$645M), the 1997 Iusacell acquisition, the 1998 Unefon launch, the October 2002 Banco Azteca founding, the 2008-2012 Advance America transactions, the 2011 Total Play greenfield launch, the January 2015 Iusacell sale to AT&T (~$2.5B), and the 2023-2024 Total Play liability-management exercise. Sortable by year, sector, deal size, structure, and long-duration compounder pattern. Search by target name (Elektra, TV Azteca, Imevision, Banco Azteca, Iusacell, Unefon, Nextel, AT&T, Total Play, Advance America, Purpose Financial, Azteca America, Salon, prestamos prendarios, Circulo Azteca, Punto Cash), by sector (Retail, Broadcast Media, Banking / Credit, Mobile Telecom, Fixed Telecom, US Consumer Finance, International, Digital / Streaming), or by structural term (whole-company, majority stake, minority stake, divestiture, IPO, spinoff, greenfield). Every row is a fact-checkable reference. This is a living dataset — updated whenever Grupo Salinas closes a new material deal, executes a divestiture, or announces a structural adjustment.
| Year | Target / Event | Sector | Deal Type | Stake / Consideration | Long-Duration Compounder | Strategic Note | Status |
|---|
Roll-ups reflect the material events cataloged in the table above. USD totals are directional at best and reflect only the subset of transactions where consideration was publicly disclosed. Structural events (the 1993 Elektra IPO, the 2002 Banco Azteca license, the 2011 Total Play launch, the 2020s Rivaud-style holding simplifications) do not contribute to the dollar rollups. The 1993 TV Azteca privatization (~$645M), the 2015 Iusacell sale to AT&T (~$2.5B), and the 2008/2012 Advance America transactions anchor the disclosed-consideration roll-ups across the group's history.
Includes both acquisitions and divestitures where consideration was individually disclosed. Positive figures represent capital deployed on acquisitions or realized on sales; the 2010s era is anchored by the 2015 Iusacell/AT&T divestiture (~$2.5B). Bar length is proportional within this table only.
Grupo Salinas's structural profile is distinctive for the prevalence of greenfield launches (Banco Azteca, Total Play, Unefon, Azteca America, Azteca 7, Salon) alongside a small number of large control acquisitions (Elektra family transitions, TV Azteca / Imevision, Iusacell). The group has favored building rather than buying at most points in its history.
Retail, Broadcast Media, and Banking / Credit concentrate the historical record. Mobile Telecom concentrates in 1997-2015 (Iusacell / Unefon). Fixed Telecom concentrates in 2011-Today (Total Play). International concentrates in 1997-2015 Central/South America Elektra buildouts. Corporate captures structural events and Rivaud-style holding simplifications.
Grupo Salinas's record leans strongly control-oriented and greenfield-oriented rather than minority-stake or portfolio-oriented. The group has typically built or bought whole platforms, held them for at least a decade, and either scaled them (Banco Azteca, Total Play), monetized them (Iusacell), or restructured them (TV Azteca content strategy). Minority-stake positions are rare.
On November 7, 2014, Grupo Salinas announced the sale of Iusacell — Mexico's third-largest mobile carrier, held via Grupo Iusacell — to AT&T for approximately $2.5B enterprise value including approximately $800M of assumed debt and net cash consideration of approximately $1.675B to the seller. The transaction closed in January 2015 following regulatory approvals. Iusacell had approximately 8.6M subscribers at close and operated 3G and LTE networks with meaningful spectrum holdings across Mexican markets.
The strategic logic ran three ways at once: (1) AT&T was executing an aggressive cross-border North American wireless build under CEO Randall Stephenson, needed a Mexican anchor to complement its US footprint, and was willing to pay a premium for spectrum and subscriber base that would have been prohibitively expensive to build organically; (2) Iusacell had struggled for over a decade in a Mexican mobile market dominated by America Movil / Telcel (Carlos Slim, ~70% share) and had never achieved the scale that would justify continued reinvestment against a dominant incumbent; and (3) the sale monetized Grupo Salinas's mobile-carrier position at a valuation multiple that would have been difficult to achieve through operating improvement alone. AT&T subsequently acquired Nextel Mexico from NII Holdings in a bankruptcy-driven transaction and rebranded the combined operation as AT&T Mexico.
Practitioner reading: The Iusacell / AT&T divestiture is the paradigmatic case of a founder-controlled EM conglomerate exiting a struggling operating asset at a cyclical peak in acquirer appetite. Read alongside the Institute's FEMSA record (a differently-structured Mexican operator) and any cross-border wireless M&A analysis where AT&T, T-Mobile, or Verizon appear as buyer. The transaction is also a reminder that the Iusacell period should not be dismissed as a strategic error — while operationally difficult, the eventual monetization delivered ~$2.5B in enterprise value against a mobile-carrier position that had generated persistent operating losses.
On October 26, 2002, Banco Azteca opened for business inside approximately 800 Grupo Elektra stores across Mexico. It was the first new full Mexican banking license granted in nearly a decade, and it was purpose-designed around a specific strategic thesis: banking the underbanked Mexican consumer. Traditional Mexican banks (Banamex, Bancomer, Santander) did not serve, and structurally could not profitably serve, the majority of Mexican households whose income levels, documentation gaps, and cash-based purchasing habits fell outside standard credit-scoring frameworks.
Banco Azteca's operating architecture solved for those constraints directly. Each Elektra store served as a bank branch. Credit officers assessed borrowers on the same visit as the merchandise purchase, using proprietary scoring that included non-traditional signals (visible household stability, purchase history at Elektra, community references) alongside standard inputs. Small-ticket unsecured consumer credit — typically financing a specific appliance or electronics purchase — was extended immediately and collected through weekly in-store visits by field collection officers on motorcycle routes. Deposits were solicited through in-store savings products marketed to the same customer base.
The scale outcome has been remarkable. By the mid-2020s Banco Azteca serves approximately 19M+ depositors and is one of the largest consumer-lending platforms in Latin America. It remains the primary economic engine of Grupo Elektra and the strategic core of the modern group's operating identity. The 2008 attempted Advance America acquisition and the eventual reorganization of US consumer-finance operations under Purpose Financial were extensions of the same thesis into the US underbanked market. Banco Azteca has also served as a laboratory for Grupo Salinas's broader financial-services experiments, including Circulo Azteca (integrated retail-media-credit ecosystem branding), Punto Cash (partial ownership; payments), and adjacent digital-financial-services initiatives.
In July 1993, the administration of Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari executed one of the largest privatizations of the reform era: the sale of state broadcaster Imevision, operator of Mexican federal government television channels 7 and 13, plus a chain of movie theaters (Compania Operadora de Teatros / COTSA) and a smaller print operation. Multiple Mexican and international consortia bid; Ricardo Salinas Pliego's Radio Televisora del Centro consortium won at approximately $645M. Imevision became TV Azteca.
The transaction is foundational to modern Grupo Salinas identity for three reasons: (1) it was the single largest deal Ricardo Salinas Pliego had executed to that point, only six years after inheriting control of the family business at age 31; (2) it delivered a broadcast-television platform that has functioned ever since as marketing infrastructure for the entire Grupo Salinas customer-facing operation, reaching the exact demographic that Elektra and Banco Azteca serve; and (3) its financing became one of the longest-running Mexican corporate controversies of the 1990s. A portion of the bid was financed through a loan from Raul Salinas de Gortari, brother of the then-Mexican President (not related to Ricardo Salinas Pliego, despite the surname coincidence). When Raul Salinas de Gortari was subsequently prosecuted on unrelated corruption charges, the loan structure became the subject of extended legal dispute that was substantively resolved in the early 2000s.
Under Ricardo's operational leadership TV Azteca launched Azteca 7 and Azteca 13 (later rebranded Azteca Uno) as its flagship national broadcast channels, produced content including Big Brother Mexico, La Academia, and long-running telenovelas, launched Azteca America in 2001 as a US Spanish-language broadcast affiliate network (later restructured and eventually largely discontinued), expanded through TV Azteca International into Latin America, and pivoted portions of its content strategy toward digital and streaming platforms in the 2020s. TV Azteca undertook a distressed bond restructuring across 2020-2024 amid a difficult Mexican advertising cycle, and it remains BMV-listed under ticker AZTECACPO. It is the number-two Mexican broadcast television network behind Grupo Televisa.
In 2011 Grupo Salinas launched Total Play Telecomunicaciones as a greenfield fiber-to-the-home broadband and pay-TV operator, in direct competition with Carlos Slim's Telmex (the incumbent Mexican fixed-line operator) and Grupo Televisa's izzi Telecom. Total Play built one of the largest fiber networks in Mexico from a standing start, reaching millions of homes passed and several million paying subscribers by the mid-2020s. The build was funded significantly through USD-denominated high-yield bond issuance in the late 2010s and early 2020s, taking advantage of Mexican peso-USD basis dynamics and a receptive US high-yield market.
In 2023-2024 Total Play executed a distressed liability-management exercise (LME) on its outstanding USD bonds, exchanging debt at discounts to par, extending maturities across the 2025 and 2028 bond stacks, and stabilizing the capital structure through a coordinated exchange offer. The exchange responded to a challenging combination of factors: high USD interest rates squeezing pesos-to-USD debt-service coverage, slower-than-projected subscriber ramp against dominant incumbents, and Mexican peso volatility. The transaction was structured to avoid a formal bankruptcy-court process while achieving meaningful debt reduction.
Total Play remains unlisted and sits inside the private Grupo Salinas holding structure alongside Grupo Elektra, TV Azteca, and Banco Azteca. It is the primary consumer-technology extension of the Grupo Salinas customer-cohort thesis, delivering broadband and digital services to households already served by Elektra retail and Banco Azteca financial products. As of the mid-2020s Total Play is one of the largest fiber operators in Mexico by subscribers and homes passed, though its precise operating metrics are not fully public given the private status.
The most common practitioner questions about the Grupo Salinas acquisition and divestiture record.
Grupo Salinas is controlled by Ricardo Benjamin Salinas Pliego (born October 19, 1955), grandson of the founder Benjamin Salinas Westrup, who took control of the family business in 1987 following the death of his father Hugo Salinas Rocha and has run it since. The group is a family-controlled conglomerate operating Grupo Elektra (BMV: ELEKTRA), TV Azteca (BMV: AZTECACPO), Banco Azteca, Total Play Telecomunicaciones, and adjacent holdings. Salinas Pliego holds a Forbes-estimated net worth of approximately $12-14B and is consistently among the wealthiest individuals in Mexico and Latin America. His son Benjamin Salinas Sada has held CEO roles across group companies including TV Azteca.
Grupo Elektra completed its initial public offering on the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (Mexican Stock Exchange, BMV) in 1993 under the ticker ELEKTRA. The IPO capitalized the aggressive Latin American retail expansion of the 1990s. Elektra briefly listed ADRs on the New York Stock Exchange in the 1990s but delisted following the 2005 SEC settlement (approximately $8M) over related-party disclosure disputes. Elektra remains BMV-listed today and is one of the largest specialty-retail-and-financial holding companies in Latin America.
In November 2014, Grupo Salinas announced the sale of Iusacell (the third-largest Mexican mobile carrier, held via Grupo Iusacell) to AT&T for approximately $2.5B enterprise value including approximately $800M of assumed debt. The transaction closed in January 2015. Two forces drove the decision: (1) AT&T was aggressively assembling a cross-border North American wireless footprint and needed a Mexican anchor, offering a premium price for Iusacell's spectrum and 8.6M subscribers; and (2) Iusacell had struggled for over a decade in a market dominated by America Movil (Telcel, Carlos Slim), and the sale monetized the position at a valuation that would have been difficult to achieve organically. AT&T subsequently acquired Nextel Mexico as well and rebranded the combined operation as AT&T Mexico.
Banco Azteca received its Mexican banking license in October 2002 and opened for business inside Grupo Elektra stores across Mexico. It was the first new full banking license granted in Mexico in nearly a decade and was designed around a specific strategic thesis: banking the unbanked Mexican consumer base already familiar with Elektra's consumer-credit lending. By placing the bank inside the retail footprint (approximately 800 stores at launch, ~1,200+ today), Banco Azteca reached tens of millions of Mexicans whose income levels and documentation gaps had historically excluded them from the traditional Mexican banking system. Today Banco Azteca serves approximately 19M+ depositors and is one of the largest consumer-lending platforms in Latin America. The bank remains the strategic core of Grupo Elektra's economics.
TV Azteca (BMV: AZTECACPO) is Mexico's second-largest broadcast television network, operating flagship channels Azteca Uno (formerly Azteca 13) and Azteca 7. It was created through the July 1993 privatization of the state-owned Imevision broadcast group by the Salinas de Gortari administration; Ricardo Salinas Pliego's Radio Televisora del Centro consortium won the bidding at approximately $645M against multiple Mexican and international competitors, financed in significant part by a controversial loan from Carlos Salinas de Gortari's brother Raul Salinas de Gortari (the subject of subsequent legal disputes resolved by 2003). TV Azteca launched Azteca America in 2001 as a US Spanish-language broadcast affiliate network (later restructured), produces Big Brother Mexico, La Academia, and telenovelas, and has pivoted portions of its content strategy to digital and streaming in the 2020s. TV Azteca has undergone bond restructurings in 2020-2024 amid a difficult Mexican advertising cycle.
Total Play Telecomunicaciones is the Grupo Salinas fiber-to-the-home broadband and pay-TV operator launched in 2011. Total Play built one of the largest fiber networks in Mexico from a standing start, reaching millions of homes passed and several million paying subscribers by the mid-2020s. The build was funded significantly through USD-denominated high-yield bond issuance in the late 2010s and early 2020s. In 2023-2024 Total Play executed a distressed liability-management exercise on its 2025 and 2028 bonds, extending maturities and exchanging debt at discounts to par amid a challenging Mexican peso funding environment. Total Play is not separately listed and sits inside the private Grupo Salinas holding structure alongside Grupo Elektra, TV Azteca, and Banco Azteca.
In April 2008 Grupo Elektra announced the acquisition of Advance America, Cash Advance Centers — then the largest US payday-lending chain, publicly listed on the NYSE — for approximately $780M ($6.00 per share cash). The transaction was designed to extend the underbanked-consumer-credit thesis into the US market, complementing Banco Azteca and Elektra's Mexican consumer lending. The deal ultimately did not close on those terms; Elektra withdrew the offer in the summer of 2008 amid market conditions and regulatory uncertainty. Elektra separately acquired Advance America in a later 2012 transaction at a lower valuation of approximately $780M, and the position was subsequently divested / consolidated within Grupo Elektra's US consumer-finance operations, later organized under Purpose Financial.
Forbes estimates Ricardo Salinas Pliego's net worth at approximately $12-14B as of 2025-2026, ranking him among the wealthiest individuals in Mexico and Latin America (typically top three, behind Carlos Slim). The wealth is concentrated in his controlling stakes in Grupo Elektra, TV Azteca, and Total Play, plus adjacent holdings and personal Bitcoin allocation (Salinas has been an outspoken Bitcoin advocate since 2020, publicly stating in various interviews that he holds a meaningful share of his liquid net worth in Bitcoin). Net-worth figures are directional and fluctuate with Elektra and TV Azteca share prices and Bitcoin's dollar value.
Ricardo Salinas Pliego has been publicly outspoken about Bitcoin since 2020, describing it in interviews and social media as sound money and a hedge against fiat debasement. He has stated that he holds a significant portion of his personal liquid portfolio in Bitcoin. Banco Azteca has explored (but not implemented at scale) Bitcoin-related services for Mexican consumers, and Salinas participated informally in the discourse around El Salvador's 2021 Bitcoin adoption and the subsequent Bitcoin-bond ('Volcano bond') proposal by the Bukele administration. Grupo Salinas has not disclosed a corporate Bitcoin treasury position at the Grupo Elektra listed-entity level in the manner of MicroStrategy; the exposure is publicly framed as personal.
In 2005 the US Securities and Exchange Commission brought a civil action against Ricardo Salinas Pliego and other Grupo Elektra executives over disclosure practices related to certain 2003 related-party transactions involving Codisco Investments (a joint venture that acquired discounted Elektra and TV Azteca debt). Salinas settled the SEC action in 2006 for approximately $8M without admitting or denying wrongdoing. Elektra's ADRs, which had traded on the NYSE, were subsequently delisted; Elektra remains BMV-listed. The 2005-2006 SEC matter is part of a longer-running set of regulatory and tax-authority disputes between Grupo Salinas entities and Mexican SAT (Servicio de Administracion Tributaria), several of which remain in various stages of litigation.
Grupo Salinas is the umbrella brand for the family-controlled conglomerate; it is not itself a listed entity. The principal listed operating companies are Grupo Elektra (BMV: ELEKTRA), which contains the specialty retail and Banco Azteca financial operations, and TV Azteca (BMV: AZTECACPO). Total Play Telecomunicaciones is unlisted and held privately within the family control layer. Adjacent private holdings include Circulo Azteca (the integrated retail-media-credit ecosystem branding), various real-estate investments, and Ricardo Salinas Pliego's personal portfolio. The family holds voting control through a mixture of direct family holdings and holding-company entities; free-float minorities exist in Elektra and TV Azteca but the family retains effective operational control at both.
Grupo Salinas entities including Grupo Elektra and TV Azteca have been in continuous dispute with the Mexican Servicio de Administracion Tributaria (SAT) across multiple tax years, spanning the 2000s, 2010s, and 2020s. The disputed amounts, aggregated across matters, have been publicly reported at various points as several tens of billions of Mexican pesos (equivalent to roughly $2-4B USD at contemporaneous FX rates), though the numbers move with case-by-case rulings, appeals, and interest accruals. The group's stated position has generally been that the assessments are unfounded and are being defended on the merits through the full available appeals process. Several matters remain under litigation as of 2026. Practitioners reading the group's financials should treat the SAT disputes as a material overhang whose ultimate resolution is difficult to size from external disclosures.
Grupo Salinas sits at the intersection of the Mexican family-holding tradition (companion to FEMSA and Grupo Carso / Slim), the founder-controlled EM conglomerate tradition (companion to Alibaba, Naspers / Prosus, CK Hutchison), and the underbanked-consumer-finance tradition (companion to Advance America / Purpose Financial in the US and adjacent EM microfinance references). Read alongside the following pages.
Educational reference. Not investment advice. Not a solicitation. Not affiliated with Grupo Salinas, Grupo Elektra, TV Azteca, Banco Azteca, Total Play Telecomunicaciones, Iusacell, Unefon, Advance America, Purpose Financial, Azteca America, Circulo Azteca, Punto Cash, or any of their subsidiaries or affiliates, nor with Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Benjamin Salinas Sada, or any past or present Grupo Salinas executive or family member. The Baratelli Institute publishes under the Lowe v. SEC publisher exception; neutral positioning maintained throughout. Deal figures cited in this catalog are sourced primarily to Grupo Elektra and TV Azteca annual reports and CNBV filings, contemporaneous press coverage (Reuters, Bloomberg, Financial Times, El Financiero, Reforma, El Universal, El Economista, Expansion, The Wall Street Journal), Wikipedia English and Spanish editions on Grupo Salinas, Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Grupo Elektra, and TV Azteca, and standard practitioner references. USD amounts are approximate; where original consideration was denominated in Mexican pesos (MXN), the reported figure is directional and reflects contemporaneous FX rates. Several transactions and follow-on positions are individually undisclosed and are flagged with "approx" or "n/d" (not disclosed) rather than fabricating precision. The 1993 TV Azteca privatization price of ~$645M is reported at contemporaneous FX; original bid consideration included both cash and staged payments. The 2015 Iusacell / AT&T sale figure of ~$2.5B is enterprise value including approximately $800M assumed debt. The ~19M+ Banco Azteca depositors figure and ~1,200+ Elektra stores figure are directional at 2024-2025 disclosures; exact numbers move with each reporting period. Ricardo Salinas Pliego personal net worth of ~$12-14B is a Forbes real-time estimate; the number fluctuates materially with Elektra and TV Azteca share prices and Bitcoin dollar value. Group employee counts and Total Play subscriber counts are approximate and directional. Corrections welcome via the link in the footer.
“We started with a furniture store in Monterrey and learned to sell televisions on credit. When we built a bank inside every store, the entire underbanked Mexican consumer finally had access to formal financial services. Everything else is scale.”
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Berkshire, Danaher, Constellation, Blackstone, Apollo, LVMH, and 37 more.
Board-grade practitioner memos — LVMH, SpaceX, Dell, Disney, Belron.
One-page cheat sheet — formulas, conventions, sensitivity rules.