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Encyclopedia > Ricardo Salinas Pliego
Ricardo B. Salinas Pliego
Ricardo B. Salinas Pliego

Ricardo Benjamín Salinas Pliego (b. in 1956) is a Mexican businessmen and one of Forbes World's Richest People since 2000. He serves as President and CEO of Grupo Salinas and Grupo Elektra, two holdings with interests vested in telecommunications, media and retail stores, among those TV Azteca, Elektra, Iusacell, Unefon and Banco Azteca. Download high resolution version (450x645, 82 KB)Ricardo Salinas Pliego in a picture taken by Ariel Gutiérrez Vivanco on 2002-10-30 and published in [1]. According to fuente. ... Download high resolution version (450x645, 82 KB)Ricardo Salinas Pliego in a picture taken by Ariel Gutiérrez Vivanco on 2002-10-30 and published in [1]. According to fuente. ... 1956 (MCMLVI) was a leap year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ... This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... 2000 (MM) was a leap year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Chief Executive Officer (CEO) is the job of having the ultimate executive responsibility or authority within an organization or corporation. ... Grupo Salinas logo Grupo Salinas is a Mexican corporation which owns the second-largest television network in the country, TV Azteca as well as one of the largest retail stores Elektra, as well as financial, telecommunication and Internet companies. ... Grupo Elektra logo Grupo Elektra is a Mexican financial and retail corporation owned by Grupo Salinas. ... A holding company is a company that owns enough voting stock in another firm to control management and operations by influencing or electing its board of directors. ... TV Azteca is the second largest Mexican television network. ... Iusacell is a Mexican mobile services carrier. ... Unefon is a Mexican mobile phone company owned by TV Azteca. ... Banco Azteca logo Banco Azteca is a Mexican bank founded in 2002 and owned by Grupo Elektra. ...


Salinas Pliego has a degree in Accountancy (with Honors) from the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Studies (1977) and a Masters in Business Administration from Tulane University (1979). Before joining Grupo Elektra he worked at Arthur Andersen. He's the father of three children and lives in Mexico City with his wife, María Laura Medina. Accountancy (profession) or accounting (methodology) is the measurement, disclosure or provision of assurance about financial information primarily used by managers, investors, tax authorities and other decision makers to make resource allocation decisions within companies, organizations, and public agencies. ... ITESM Main Building (Rectoría) and mural ITESM is the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, also known as the Tec de Monterrey, or simply Tec. Originated in Monterrey, Mexico, it has currently over 30 satellite locations throughout the country. ... For the album by Ash, see 1977 (album). ... Master of Business Administration (MBA) is a tertiary degree in business management. ... Tulane University is a private, nonsectarian, coeducational research university located in New Orleans, Louisiana. ... For the song by the Smashing Pumpkins, see 1979 (song). ... This article or section seems not to be written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia entry. ... Nickname: Location of Mexico City in central Mexico Coordinates: Country Mexico Federal entity Federal District Boroughs The 16 delegaciones Founded (as Tenochtitlan) c. ...


Ricardo B. Salinas is one of Latin America’s leading corporate figures and entrepreneurs. In his nonpareil career, he has fought an Old Guard of oligarchs and monopolists, and he has thrived. He has profoundly abetted Mexico’s progress toward modernization by creating new markets among Mexico’s working classes.


And, as chairman and founder of Grupo Salinas [1], which includes several of the largest companies in Mexico, Mr. Salinas has spearheaded the promotion of free trade, government deregulation, and foreign investment. His work is at the heart of the Mexican modernization as the innovations he first introduced continue to decisively affect management, marketing, and information technology throughout Mexico.


The origins of Grupo Salinas are set in 1906, when Mr. Salinas’ great grandfather, Benjamín Salinas, created Salinas & Rocha, a modest family-owned furniture manufacturing company. In 1950, Mr. Salinas’ grandfather, Hugo Salinas Rocha, created Elektra [2], and when Ricardo Salinas became CEO of the company in 1987, Elektra had fewer than 60 stores and averted financial distress following the devaluation of the peso. Mr. Salinas refocused Elektra on basic products: appliances, electronics, and furniture. Significantly, he developed a vast new consumer market among Mexico’s lower-middle income consumers by providing credit sales (guided by careful risk-management practices) and diverse financial products and services, including money transfers via an alliance with Western Union. In just a few years, through organic expansion and acquisitions, Mr. Salinas built Grupo Elektra [3]into Latin America’s largest specialty retailer.


Grupo Elektra expanded further and became Mexico’s biggest consumer-finance company when, in 2002, it won the first banking license granted to any Mexican institution in nearly a decade. The strategy was to build new markets by creating new buying power among classes of people largely ignored by most other major Mexican businesses. In 2003, Grupo Elektra was granted a license to operate a pension-management business branded as Afore Azteca [4] which started an industry-wide revolution by setting new low commission standards, and increasing the range of services for clients overlooked by financial services firms in Mexico. Similarly, Grupo Elektra launched Seguros Azteca [5], an insurance company designed to bring basic insurance products to the vastly underinsured mass market.


Mr. Salinas is also chairman of TV Azteca [6], one of the two largest producers of Spanish language television programming in the world. It is one of only two nationwide broadcasters in Mexico, and is now the most profitable integrated broadcaster in the world.


TV Azteca was founded in 1993 when an investor group led by Mr. Salinas bought from the Mexican government two national television licenses coupled with television studios full of decrepit broadcasting equipment. Under his leadership, TV Azteca has broken Mexico’s long-standing television monopoly through the successful privatization of the Azteca 13 and Azteca 7 networks.


Most recently, Mr. Salinas created the Empresario Azteca [7] program and its parallel, Empresario Azteca Association (ASMAZ), as a broad program to support small businesses the core of Mexico’s economy. This initiative applies the breadth and depth of Grupo Salinas’ management expertise, financing capabilities, market strength, purchasing power, and its extensive distribution network to provide training, consulting, financing, equipment procurement, and other resources to small businesses throughout the country.


Mr. Salinas also formed the nonprofit Fundación Azteca in 1997 to address a broad range of social problems with ongoing campaigns in healthcare and nutrition, education, and the protection of the environment. It is a foundation that finances and supports other foundations, thus leveraging its impact exponentially. Fundación Azteca has raised millions of dollars, benefiting hundreds of thousands of lives. Today Fundación Azteca [8] is one of the highest-recognized non-profits in Latin America. In 2005, Mr. Salinas launched Fundación Azteca America [9], which is committed to improving the well-being of the Hispanic community in the United States by functioning as a nationwide bridge between donors and Hispanic foundations.


In 2001, TV Azteca launched Azteca America [10], a wholly owned Spanish-language broadcasting network aimed at the 40 million-strong Hispanic population of the United States. Azteca America has affiliates in 38 markets, including Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Miami, and Houston, reaching 77 percent of the Hispanic population in the U.S.


Unefon Holdings, a Grupo Salinas company has a 46.5% stake in Unefon [11]and Telecosmo. Telecosmo is the first wireless broadband Internet service provider in Mexico; and Unefon is a wireless telecommunications company that built its client base to 1.4 million subscribers and generated EBITDA of more than US$110 million after just three years in operation.


Unefon covers 19 cities with its own network and reaches an additional 23,000 urban areas through a capacity exchange and roaming agreement with Grupo Iusacell [12].


In July 2003, Movil@ccess, also a Grupo Salinas telecommunications operator, completed a successful tender offer to purchase 75% of Grupo Iusacell, which was facing bankruptcy. Since then, Iusacell’s financial performance, quality of service, and technology platforms have improved noticeably.


Mr. Salinas has been recognized by many of the world’s leading business organizations as a true business visionary. He is a member of the International Organization for Migration’s Business Advisory Board. He has addressed the World Economic Forum, The Young Presidents’ Organization, The Economist Roundtable on Mexico, and he has spoken at The Institute of the Americas, and Harvard Business School.


The Grupo Salinas is all about value – value derived from high-growth industries, from new growth markets, from high-speed national modernization, and from high-commitment programs that benefit the entire community. As a family man, a patron of the arts, and a citizen of both Mexico and the world, Mr. Salinas’ success continues to be driven by an abiding faith in free markets as the one irresistible agent of democratic change everywhere.


  Results from FactBites:
 
TV Azteca - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (943 words)
Gil Díaz's fiscal prosecutor filed the 1,200-page request to charge Salinas Pliego, who controls the No. 2 broadcaster, with the Attorney General's Office (PGR) April 27, said the people, who asked not to be identified.
Salinas Pliego, 49, made a US$109 million profit in 2003 after buying debt that TV Azteca phone unit Unefon SA owed to Nortel Networks Corp. for a discounted price, and then receiving repayment from Unefon at full value three months later, the SEC said in January.
Salinas Pliego and TV Azteca denied any wrongdoing Thursday and said they would appeal the administrative fines imposed by regulators, according to a statement sent to the Mexican stock exchange.
Ricardo Salinas Pliego - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (149 words)
Ricardo Benjamín Salinas Pliego (born 1956) is a Mexican businessmen and one of Forbes World's Richest People since 2000.
He serves as President and CEO of Grupo Salinas and Grupo Elektra, two holdings with interests vested in telecommunications, media and retail stores, among those TV Azteca, Elektra, Iusacell, Unefon and Banco Azteca.
Salinas Pliego has a degree in Accountancy (with Honors) from the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Studies (1977) and a Masters in Business Administration from Tulane University (1979).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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