Previous Close | 10.77 |
Open | 10.56 |
Bid | 10.72 x 1000000 |
Ask | 10.72 x 1000000 |
Day's Range | 10.51 - 10.51 |
52 Week Range | 10.51 - 10.51 |
Volume | |
Avg. Volume | N/A |
Market Cap | N/A |
Beta (5Y Monthly) | N/A |
PE Ratio (TTM) | N/A |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings Date | N/A |
Forward Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-Dividend Date | N/A |
1y Target Est | N/A |
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(Bloomberg) -- France’s Engie SA, Italy’s Enel SpA and Spain’s Acciona Energia SA are among the foreign companies that Mexico’s energy regulator has blocked from operating wind and solar plants as the government seeks to concentrate power in the hands of the state utility.Most Read from BloombergChinese Homebuyers Across 22 Cities Refuse to Pay MortgagesUS Inflation Quickens to 9.1%, Amping Up Fed Pressure to Go BigEuro Drops to Dollar Parity for First Time in Two DecadesThe 10 Worst Airports in
Populist President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is seeking to reclaim state control over the oil-and-gas and electricity sectors. “It’s a closing off of Mexico.”
Mexico's energy regulator fined a unit of Spain's Iberdrola 9.15 billion pesos ($466.4 million), arguing they violated a so-called self-supply power generation permit by selling electricity to their partners, according to a regulatory filing. Iberdrola Energia Monterrey delivered energy to partners in exchange for economic compensation, which constitutes a sale that is not allowed under the self-supply figure for which the permit was granted, the Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) said in the resolution posted on its website this week. "The described conduct is unlawful since it affects the legal rights that oblige the permit holder not to sell, resell or by any legal act transfer capacity or electric energy," the resolution said.