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Viewing cable 08MONTERREY101, MONTERREY CONGLOMERATES FACE GLOBALIZATION WITH MIXED

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08MONTERREY101 2008-02-29 00:42 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Consulate Monterrey
VZCZCXRO0388
PP RUEHCD RUEHGD RUEHHO RUEHNG RUEHNL RUEHRD RUEHRS RUEHTM
DE RUEHMC #0101/01 0600042
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 290042Z FEB 08
FM AMCONSUL MONTERREY
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2737
INFO RUEHME/AMEMBASSY MEXICO PRIORITY 3624
RUEHXC/ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO COLLECTIVE
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHMC/AMCONSUL MONTERREY 8102
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 MONTERREY 000101 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
SIPDIS 
DEPARTMENT PLEASE PASS TO USTR 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ECON ETRD PGOV EINV MX
SUBJECT: MONTERREY CONGLOMERATES FACE GLOBALIZATION WITH MIXED 
SUCCESS 
 
 
MONTERREY 00000101  001.2 OF 006 
 
 
1.  (SBU)  Summary.  Monterrey's 'Group of 10' is composed of 
family owned industrial conglomerates that built Monterrey into 
an industrial powerhouse starting in the 19th century.  The 
Group of 10 had tremendous economic influence and was reputed to 
have sizable political clout as well.  Since the opening of the 
Mexican economy, highlighted by the NAFTA treaty in 1994, its 
interests have diverged, as several firms have become global 
companies, others continue as primarily Mexican businesses, and 
a few others have been sold.  The flagship Monterrey company 
Cemex breaks the Group of 10 paradigm in several aspects through 
its international growth, focus on one product, and meritocracy. 
 However, Cemex is characteristic of the Group of 10 with its 
focus on process innovation rather than developing new products. 
 Several of the Group of 10 have been weakened by globalization 
and succession issues, endangering Monterrey's future as a 
business headquarters as opposed to a manufacturing site for 
foreign companies. End Summary. 
 
Historical Influence of the Group of 10 
 
2.  (U)  Monterrey remained a small trading city until 1890, 
when it began to industrialize through the founding of the 
Cuauhtemoc Moctezuma Brewery by members of the Garza, Sada, 
Muguerza and Calderon families.  The Brewery later established a 
glass company, a cardboard box company and other companies to 
provide products for distributing beer.  The companies remained 
family enterprises, with interlocking family control.  However, 
as the founding and second generations died, the companies 
divided into the current Group of 10 member companies Alfa, 
Femsa, Vitro, Cydsa, De Acero and Pyosa.  Cemex was founded by 
the Zambrano family in 1906, but it remained a small regional 
cement producer for many years, and thus Cemex did not emerge 
from the original brewery concern.  At the same time the steel 
company Fundidora de Fierro y Acero de Monterrey, founded in 
1900, began a tradition of steel production that has continued 
until today with IMSA (sold last year to the Argentine company 
Ternium), Hylsa (also sold by Alfa to Ternium) and De Acero. 
The original Fundidora de Fierro y Acero de Monterrey went 
bankrupt in 1986.  The Group of 10 are still very large 
companies, and in 2005 an insider executive estimated that they 
had combined revenues of U.S. $45 billion, roughly 6% of 
Mexico's GDP. 
 
3.  (U)  These companies also helped shape Monterrey through 
civic activities such as founding universities.  Visionary local 
leader Eugenio Garza Sada, head of the Monterrey Industrial 
Group (which later was divided into Femsa and Alfa), founded the 
leading private university, Monterrey TEC, in 1943 to train 
workers and managers for the companies.  Monterrey TEC is still 
supported today by Cemex and Femsa, and executives from these 
two companies are plentiful on the universities governing board. 
  In 1969 the Monterrey Industrial Group helped found the 
University of Monterrey (still supported by Alfa) and Vitro 
founded the Universidad Regiomontana.  In addition, the Group of 
10 companies established hospitals (e.g. the Cristus Muguerza 
hospital), local parks like Planeterio Alfa, and sponsored 
cultural events such as the recent International Cultural Forum. 
 
 
4.  (SBU)  The Monterrey Group of 10 were also reputed to have 
had substantial political clout.  Post heard from several 
sources how in the past the Group of 10 companies controlled 
Monterrey, and through their economic power and political 
influence they set the policy agenda for the city.  That has 
changed, and all of our contacts agree that the Group of 10's 
political influence has waned, and although still influential, 
they no longer can dictate policies to city officials. 
Guillermo Dillon, Executive Director of the Business Association 
CAINTRA, affirmed that the Group of 10 no longer can run 
Monterrey by themselves, and they must seek alliances with 
government officials and other businesses.  The Group of 10's 
power has always been hidden, and several of our business 
contacts questioned whether they still meet and which companies 
were in the Group of 10.  However, Post understands from 
executives within the Group of 10 that the chief executive 
officers still meet monthly, and no substitutes for the CEOs are 
permitted at these closed meetings.  According to our contact, 
the Group of 10 CEOs discuss political issues such as the 2006 
Presidential candidacy of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, President 
Calderon's fiscal reform, and benign topics such as dividing 
charitable contributions.  Although their influence is cloaked, 
we understand they still have access to the highest political 
levels in Mexico.  They also meet with other VIP visitors.  For 
example, when California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger visited 
Monterrey in November 2006, the Group of 10 arranged for a 
private meeting with Governor Schwarzenegger at one of their 
 
MONTERREY 00000101  002.2 OF 006 
 
 
homes. 
 
Mexico Opens its Economy 
 
5.  (SBU)  Monterrey's Group of 10 companies began by focusing 
on the Mexican market, and since the national economy was 
largely closed they were sheltered from international 
competition.  Roberto Guerra, Director General of the Monterrey 
division of Fitch Ratings, described to us how, in turn, the 
Group of 10 companies generally supported the PRI governments, 
and in turn they received government help to close off imports. 
However, in 1983 the Mexican government began to eliminate 
import license requirements, official import prices, and 
qualitative restrictions.  The trade liberalization program 
sought to make Mexican producers more competitive by providing 
affordable inputs and prodding them to become international 
companies.  By 1985 the share of total imports subject to 
licensing requirements had fallen from 75% to 38%.  In 1986 
Mexico acceded to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 
(GATT), and in 1987 Mexico agreed to a major liberalization of 
bilateral trade relations with the United States.  As a result, 
the share of domestic output protected by import licenses fell 
from 92% in 1985 to 18% by the end of 1990.  The maximum tariff 
was lowered from 100% in 1985 to 20% in 1987, and the weighted 
average tariff fell from 29% in 1985 to 12% by the end of 1990. 
The volume of imports subject to entry permits was reduced from 
96% of the total in 1982 to 4% by 1992.  The crowning touch was 
the NAFTA agreement, concluded in 1993, permitting free trade 
and foreign investment between the United States, Canada and 
Mexico. 
 
Group of 10 Reacts to Globalization 
 
6.  (U)  Mexico's trade liberalization presented the Monterrey 
Group of 10 with both a challenge and an opportunity.  For the 
first time the Monterrey industrialists faced strong 
international competition.  However, they also received an 
enormous opportunity to build international companies, 
particularly given their lower labor costs and proximity to the 
United States, the largest market in the world.  Based on 
Econoff's discussions with academics, business consultants, 
business association leaders, and executives from private 
companies, there is a clear consensus that Cemex has transformed 
itself into a premier international company, Alfa and Femsa have 
developed strong international presences, and Vitro and Cydsa 
are having great difficulty, IMSA and Hysamex have been sold to 
a foreign company.  Of the four remaining companies, Xignux and 
Proeza have developed internationally, while De Acero and Pyosa 
remain primarily focused on Mexico. 
 
7.  (SBU)  Although a number of the companies are listed on the 
New York or Mexican stock markets, the Monterrey Group of 10 
companies remain family conglomerates.  Except for Cemex, which 
is primarily owned by 15 families, the Monterrey Group of 10 
firms are typically owned by one or two extended families, and 
family members are chief executives of the companies.  Our 
contacts report that some of the companies are listed in part 
for tax benefits, because they can transfer a certain percentage 
of ownership to the next generation without paying taxes.  In 
addition, Vitro and Cydsa have recently bought back their stock, 
according to a business consultant, to avoid market discipline 
by stockholders.  Although the conglomerates normally have a 
board of directors, the board does not control the company and 
is not truly independent. Indeed, in some cases the slots for 
independent directors are filled with former employees or other 
Group of 10 family members, creating an interlocking network of 
friends, family and associates.  Talented outsiders have the 
ability to climb the corporate ladder at certain firms, such as 
Cemex, Alfa and Femsa, but even then there are cases where 
professional managers have been dumped in favor of promoting 
family members. 
 
8.  (SBU)  As with all family companies, the most difficult 
issue is succession.   Post understands when a CEO dies or 
retires, the family normally gathers and picks the most capable 
of the next generation to run the business.  However, in some 
cases, there are family disputes, which sometimes results in 
dividing up the companies into differing ines of business for 
the various sons (not daughters) to run.  However, as the 
Monterrey companies reach the third generation, with a greater 
number of heirs, there is also pressure to sell the company and 
divide the proceeds, as apparently occurred with the steel 
company IMSA. 
 
Profiles of the Monterrey Group of 10 Companies 
 
 
MONTERREY 00000101  003.2 OF 006 
 
 
The Maverick Cemex 
 
9.  (U)  Cemex is the exemplar of an international Monterrey 
company, with operations in over 50 countries.  Cemex is the 
world's largest building materials supplier and third largest 
cement producer.  Although Cemex was founded in 1906, it was a 
regional cement producer until 1976 when it acquired other 
Mexican cement companies to become the largest Mexican cement 
producer.  Since then Cemex has aggressively purchased other 
international cement producers, including in Spain, Venezuela, 
Colombia, the Philippines, Egypt, and the United States.  In 
2005 Cemex acquired London based RMC Group for U.S. $5.8 billion 
to expand in Europe, and in 2007 Cemex bought the Australia 
based Rinker for U.S. $15.3 billion to increase its presence in 
the United States.  Cemex's rise has been directed by Lorenzo 
Zambrano, whose grandfather founded the company.  Zambrano 
joined the company in 1968, and became Chief Executive Officer 
in 1985.  Cemex's sales increased from U.S. $3.4 billion in 1996 
to U.S. $18.2 billion in 2006, a compounded annual growth rate 
of 18%.   Cemex purchased Rinker during the U.S. construction 
boom.  Not every acquisition pays off immediately, and in 
December 2007 Cemex laid off 10% of its work force worldwide to 
cope with decreased sales due to the slowdown in the United 
States housing market. 
 
10.  (SBU)  Cemex has become an international company by 
breaking the family conglomerate mold.  Cemex originally was a 
minor member of the Group of 10, far smaller than the 
predecessors to Alfa, Femsa, Vitro and Cydsa.  However, now 
Cemex so overshadows the others that local business consultants 
joke that the 'group of 10 has become the group of one'.  Cemex 
focused on just one product, the basic commodity of cement, and 
does not have three of four lines of businesses typical of the 
family conglomerates.  Cemex is also owned by 15 families, so 
there is closer resemblance to traditional stockholders.   Cemex 
has successfully made process innovations allowing it to ship 
concrete long distances, and finance its international 
acquisitions cheaply.   Cemex hires and promotes much more based 
on principals of merit, not family ties.  A professor from the 
leading Monterrey business school, Monterrey TEC, reports that 
Cemex hires the cream of the crop.  An analyst for HSBC bank 
commented that Cemex has world quality leadership and a deep 
bench of smart executives, often educated in elite foreign 
universities.  Cemex is also known for the very long hours 
logged by its executives.  Econoff has visited both Cemex and 
Vitro, and there are striking differences in the atmosphere of 
the companies.  In Cemex employees labor away in cubicles, while 
Vitro maintains the old world charm of elegant furnishings, 
ample staff to fetch coffee, and private bathrooms for every 
junior executive. 
 
11.  (SBU)  Cemex's institutional strengths are also fortified 
by profits from a captive Mexican market.  According to the book 
Grey Gold, written by a respected journalist, Cemex has 51% of 
the Mexican cement market and Mexican consumers pay above the 
world price.  Cemex has also acted to prevent cement imports. 
An interesting passage of Grey Gold describes how in 2004 three 
former Cemex employees formed a new company to import foreign 
cement into the Mexican market.  They eventually contracted a 
Jordanian ship to bring Russian cement to Mexico.  However, when 
the ship landed in the Mexican port of Altamira, Cemex led other 
Mexican cement companies to file a legal appeal to block the 
ship from unloading the cargo.  The legal case continued for 11 
months, at a loss to the importers of U.S. $30,000 per day, 
until they finally gave up and shipped the cement to Africa. 
 
Alfa: A Successful Conglomerate 
 
12.  (U)  Alfa is a large successful international company 
focusing on core businesses of autoparts, food, and 
petrochemicals.  Alfa had U.S. $7 billion in revenues in 2006, 
production facilities in North America and Europe, and sales in 
over 40 countries, accounting for 44% of total revenue.  Alfa 
was formed after the death of the family patriarch Eugenio Garza 
Sada in 1973, when the flagship Monterrey Industrial Group was 
divided into Alfa, controlled by the Garza-Sada family, and 
Femsa, controlled by Garza-Laguera family, with the Muguerza and 
Calderon families retaining minority shares.  Alfa has evolved 
over time.  In 1993, the petrochemical, food and auto parts 
units only constituted 35% of earnings, while steel was 34% and 
synthetic fibers contributed 31%.  Since then Alfa divested its 
steel company Hylsamex to the Argentine steel producer Ternium 
in 2005 (at an excellent price), and greatly reduced its 
reliance on synthetic fibers.  By 2006 the petrochemical 
division (43%), processed food (31%) and autoparts (19%) 
contributed 97% of earnings.  Alfa is listed on the Mexican 
 
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stock exchange, and its directors include the heads of Cemex and 
Vitro.  According to a financial consultant, Alfa has 'played 
the conglomerate game well,' moving quickly to invest in areas 
such as aluminum cylinder heads (for cars) in Europe as the U.S. 
market weakened.  A business school professor agreed that after 
Cemex, Alfa and Femsa are popular choices for rising young 
Mexican executives, and there are considerable opportunities for 
talented outsiders to rise up in these companies. 
 
Beverage Giant Femsa Looks South 
 
13.  (U)  Femsa is the direct descendent of the original brewery 
that started Monterrey's industrial development in 1890.  Femsa 
today is an international corporation focusing on beer, soft 
drinks and convenience stores.  Femsa's revenues are growing 
strongly, doubling since 2002, to U.S. $11.7 Billion in 2006. 
Femsa's revenues derive from three sources, Femsa's joint 
venture with Coca-cola (45%), beer (28%) and Oxxo convenience 
stores (similar to 7-11) (28%).   Like Cemex, Femsa has grown 
through international acquisitions, such as Panamco in 2002, the 
largest Coca-cola bottler in Latin America (and one of the three 
largest in the world), and Femsa has continued smaller 
purchases, including the Brazilian brewery Kaiser in 2006. 
Femsa has grown smartly in Mexico, doubling the number of OXXO 
convenience stores from 2002 to 2006, which have displaced the 
traditional Mexican small store (tienda).  Femsa has operations 
and sales throughout Central America, Colombia, Brazil, 
Venezuela, and a beachhead in Argentina.  Femsa is listed on the 
New York and Mexican Stock exchanges.  Moreover, Femsa just 
received a vote of confidence, since Microsft's Bill Gates 
invested U.S. $392 million in Femsa in December 2007. 
 
Vitro: The Glass Dinosaur 
 
14.  (U)  Vitro is one of the founding groups of the Monterrey 
Group of 10, from the unit that provided beer bottles for the 
brewery.  Vitro is still a substantial company, with U.S. $2.5 
billion in sales, and Vitro's core businesses are in glass 
containers (beverages) and flat steel (for the auto industry). 
Vitro manufactures in eight countries, exports goods to 40 
countries, and, according to Vitro, only 43% of its sales are 
within Mexico.  Vitro ran into trouble in the 1990s, when it had 
large debts denominated in dollars, which became a heavy burden 
after the 1994 devaluation.  Since 2001 Vitro has been shedding 
non-core assets, such as joint ventures and real estate, and has 
refinanced its debt to reduce a very heavy dollar debt burden. 
Still, Vitro's revenues have stagnated since 2002.  Vitro has 
also faced external challenges such as high energy costs (14% of 
their total costs), beverage containers moving from glass to 
plastic, and the slowing U.S. auto industry.  Vitro previously 
owned a large share of Cydsa, which it sold to raise money, and 
although it is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, the 
Sada-Gonzalez family continues to control the company. 
 
15.  (SBU)  Econoff met with business consultants, financial 
analysts, industry leaders, and they all cited Vitro as an 
example of a poorly managed conglomerate.  According to several 
business consultants, Vitro's plants are obsolete and they face 
more efficient international competition.  Vitro's markets also 
have relatively low barriers to entry, increasing the pressure 
on Vitro.  Vitro has missed many opportunities, such as when it 
sold out its joint venture with Whirlpool in 2002.  Whirlpool 
now has a large facility, including a research center, here in 
Monterrey, with substantial exports of home appliances to the 
United States.  As previously mentioned, Vitro has a genteel old 
world business atmosphere, and our contacts believe that 
advancement in Vitro is based less on merit than connections. 
An executive from another company thought that family 
in-fighting has drained Vitro of energy.  One business insider 
commented 'I don't see a future for Vitro.' 
 
Cydsa: Another Former Giant In Trouble 
 
16.  (SBU)  Cydsa is a petrochemical and textile company which 
has had difficulty coping with globalization, as it focuses on 
reducing debt and shedding assets to maintain its economic 
viability.  Cydsa was founded in 1947 with capital from the main 
Group of 10 partners, and today is owned and managed by one 
branch of the related families.  Cydsa manufactures chemicals 
and plastics, fibers and textiles, flexible packaging and water 
treatment plants.   Cydsa incurred very heavy debts (denominated 
in dollars) in the 1980s and 1990s, and recently it has shed 
assets and focused on debt reduction.  Cydsa has also struggled 
with high energy costs and foreign competition in textiles.  As 
a result, Cydsa is a 'shadow of its former self' according to a 
business consultant, and its net sales have declined from U.S. 
 
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$892 million in 1991, $814 million in 1999, to the nadir of $381 
million in 2001, but Cydsa recovered to $536 million in 2006. 
Cydsa also has minimal profits, with U.S. $31.6 million in 
losses in 2005 and only U.S. $1.6 million in profits in 2006. 
Cdysa manufactures its products in Mexico, and exports only 
constituted 18% of its sales in 2006.  Our contacts see Cydsa as 
a lumbering family conglomerate, based more on family and 
offering few opportunities for talented outsiders.  The same 
business insider who was pessimistic about Vitro said that Cydsa 
was 'not doing well, and is ready to disappear'. 
 
IMSA: The Family Cashes Out 
 
17.  (U)  The traditional and well-connected Monterrey family 
which owned IMSA, an established Monterrey steel company, sold 
it in 2007 and distributed the substantial proceeds between the 
family members.  IMSA was founded in 1936, and it produced steel 
processed products and aluminum and plastic construction 
products.  In 2005 IMSA had manufacturing and distribution 
facilities in Mexico, the United States, Europe and Latin 
America, and IMSA had revenues of $3.6 billion, and almost 50% 
of its sales were exports.  However, IMSA faced high energy 
costs, tough foreign competition, and internal family disputes. 
IMSA had been owned by the Canales and Clariond families, but in 
2006 Fernando and Marcelo Canales purchased all of the shares 
from the Clariond family, and so the Canales family owned 91% of 
IMSA's shares.  In 2007 IMSA was sold for over U.S. $3 billion 
to the Argentine steel firm Ternium, and according to press 
reports, after paying off IMSA's debt,  the Canales family 
received over U.S. $1.5 billion.  Note.  Fernando Canales was 
Governor of Nuevo Leon from 1997-2003.  End Note. 
 
18.  (SBU)  Although IMSA faced strong international 
competition, our contacts think that the Canales family 
primarily sold IMSA because there were family disputes over how 
to divide up resources.  According to one researcher on family 
firms with the University of Monterrey, families face pressure 
with succession, because the next generation may not have the 
interest or ability to carry on the business.  This appears to 
be the case with IMSA, as the next generation was not interested 
in the businesses and it was easier to sell and distribute the 
proceeds.  Although the Canales family proclaimed that they were 
entrepreneurs and would invest in new businesses, there is 
little evidence that this has occurred.  In fact, two insiders 
reported to us that the next generation of the Canales family 
now own foreign luxury car dealerships and discos, with no other 
apparent investments. 
 
Four Successful Monterrey Companies: Xignux, Proeza, DeAcero, 
and Pyosa 
 
19.  (SBU)  Several of our business contacts pointed to Xignuz 
as an example of a smaller successful international Group of 10 
company.  Xignux was founded in 1956 with seed capital from the 
founder's father, the President and CEO of Vitro.  Xignux 
started with a wire and cable business, and now focuses on high 
quality products for industrial use, such as electrical 
harnesses and cable for automobiles and power and distribution 
transformers, and processed food.  Xignuz has production 
facilities in Mexico, the U.S. and Central and South America, 
and earns almost $3 billion in annual sales, half from outside 
Mexico.  Xignux has joint ventures with General Electric and 
Sara Lee.  A Xignux executive described these joint ventures as 
a means to expand Xignux's global expertise before its big push 
to expand internationally.  The second generation now heads 
Xignux, and it is expected to maintain control for the 
foreseeable future. 
 
20.  (U)  Proeza is another successful Group of 10 company, with 
an estimated U.S. $6 billion in sales in 2005.  Proeza focuses 
on automotive parts, fruits and fruit juices, foundries and even 
an information technology service.  Proeza was founded in 1956 
by a member of the Zambrano family, and its main subsidiary is 
Metalsa, which supplies structural steel components for cars and 
trucks and produces primarily for the North American automotive 
market.  Proeza is a private company, so less information is 
available about it.  Proeza has factories in Mexico, the United 
States and India, and sells to over 30 countries.  Our business 
contacts generally see them as well run, although one warned 
that in 10 years Proeza could face succession issues as it moves 
to the next generation. 
 
21.  (U)  De Acero is a private company manufacturing steel 
products in Mexico, and distributes to 20 countries in the 
United States, Central America and Europe.  De Acero is a 
privately held company, and we could not locate financial 
 
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information.  De Acero was founded in 1952 by the Muguerza 
family, which still leads the company today.  Our contacts 
describe De Acero as a well-run firm but with little foreign 
presence. 
 
22.  (U)  Pyosa is also a private company, which was founded in 
1938, and produces various chemical products for industrial 
clients, including paints, inks, textiles, coatings, plastics, 
car batteries and detergents.  The chief executive officer is 
the older brother of the unsuccessful PAN gubernatorial 
candidate in Nuevo Leon in 2003.  The company's manufacturing is 
based in Monterrey, and its sales appear to be focused on 
Mexico.  [Note: Several of our contacts provided slight 
variations of which companies were in the Group of 10  End Note.] 
 
23.  (U)  Aside from the Group of 10, there are other important 
Mexican and international firms in Monterrey.   Some of the 
leading Mexican companies include Gruma (tortillas and corn), 
Arca (beverage), Value Casa de Bolsa (corporate finance), 
Banorte (Mexican bank) and Soriana (supermarket chain).  There 
are also numerous foreign companies with large investments in 
Monterrey.  Now the Group of 10 does not even speak for the 
entire Monterrey business community. 
 
Comment: 
 
24.  (SBU)  Comment.  It is clear that the Monterrey Group of 10 
conglomerates have responded differently to the challenge of 
globalization. Several have prospered; others have floundered. 
One key appears to be a company's openness to talented 
outsiders, which not only attracts ability outside of the 
immediate family, but also changes the culture of the company. 
The Monterrey Group of 10 has also lost political influence, 
which many in Monterrey business circles attribute to a weaker 
and more materialist third generation.  Although this is true in 
certain cases, the more fundamental reason may be that the 
Monterrey Group of 10 no longer face as many common issues, as 
some struggle to survive in Mexico, while others compete 
globally. 
 
25.  (SBU)  One striking aspect of the Group of 10 is that its 
international success is due to acquisitions and process 
improvements, not new Mexican products.  The flagship company 
Cemex produces cement, a commodity product, and it does so very 
efficiently.  Some of the other companies focus on auto parts (a 
very strong business in Mexico now), beverages and food 
products.  Although there may be incremental improvement in 
these goods, they are not products developed by the Group of 10. 
 Many Group of 10 companies formerly focused on heavy industrial 
items such as steel or petrochemicals, but have been hurt by 
high energy costs.  Several steel units have been sold, and 
petrochemical giant Cydsa has weakened. 
 
26.  (SBU)  Monterrey often pays homage to the Group of 10 as 
part of its industrial development, but the real question is 
whether the Group of 10 conglomerates are viable entities or 
vestiges of the past.  Post believes that the larger Monterrey 
companies will continue to flourish, although some of the weaker 
Group of 10 companies may contract further or the families may 
choose to sell.  Going forward, the key will depend less on 
Monterrey family connections and more on the ability to compete 
on an international level.  End comment. 
WILLIAMSON