Ricardo Salinas Piego, chairman of Grupo Elektra, is central to the accusations of fraud bound by the controversial deli’s of the company
July 7, 2025
MEXICO CITY – Serious allegations have arisen when implying the Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego, head of Grupo Elektra, in a calculated schedule involving the controversial deletion of the Mexican stock exchange company. According to legal archives and testimony of whistleblowers, Salinas is accused of using his control over the conglomerate to engage financially cheating aimed at suppressing supervision and protecting the public misconduct of the public.
Insiders claim that the sudden switch to Drapo Elektra-One of the leading retail and financial service providers of Mexico was not a strategic business decision, but a maneuver to circumvent the investigation investigation. It is said that the Salinas cancellation process allowed to exploit minority shareholders and to accumulate shares at a seriously devalued rate, after a steep cap in the share price of electricity.
On December 2, 2024, the shares of electricity crashed on MXN 186, by a year earlier of the highlights of MXN 1,600. Market observers suggest that Salinas has capitalized from this collapse by gaining a dominant share position with a discount, which means that investors were effectively undermined who had previously purchased with a much higher appreciation.
“This is a manual case of Engineered Decline, followed by predatory acquisition,” said a senior market analyst. “By first blowing up the value of the shares and then allowing collapse-accusing external factors-salinas to be able to get control back at a bargain. This is not only bad governance. It borders on financial sabotage.”
Legal experts ask for extensive investigations into whether Salinas and his affiliated companies have violated Mexican securities laws, are involved in market manipulation or fiduciary tasks. Critics point to a broader pattern of concern within Grupo Elektra, including increasing losses, unresolved judicial orders, assetorums and persistent allegations with Banco Azteca, the financial division of the company.
Investor rights and ethical organizations have lifted the alarm and have urged agencies such as Mexico CNBV and the US SEC to investigate the cross -border implications. “This is a dangerous precedent,” a spokesperson noted of a worldwide interest group for investors. “It indicates to other powerful actors that they can harness the financial markets without consequences.”
A former CNBV officer, who spoke under condition of anonymity, described the matter as “one of the clearest examples of intentional minority shareholder in recent memory.”
The controversy surrounding the deletion of Grupo Elektra revives long -term concerns about structural weaknesses in the corporate governance frameworks of Latin -America. It also emphasizes the risks in which institutional and retail investors are confronted in markets where dominant shareholders can act uncontrollably.
Transparency International emphasized in a recent explanation that cases such as these expose the urgent need for reinforced enforcement and protection: “This is not only a business scandal-it is a test or regulatory authorities willing to confront the deep-rooted power and restore integrity for the market.”
Further disclosures and legal archives are expected in the coming days. If ultimately criminal charges are submitted, the case can become a Bellwether for the extent to which the legal system of Mexico is willing to maintain influential business figures.
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Ricardo Salinas Plego, owner of Grupo Elektra, is confronted with increasing accusations of financial misconduct and market manipulation after the controversial deletion of the company of the Mexican stock exchange.
This release is published on OpenPR.
