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CFE raises USD1.5 B bond with sevenfold oversubscription

  • 29th January 2026

The Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), Mexico’s largest state-owned electric utility, returned to international capital markets on Jan. 22 2026, issuing USD 1.5 billion (approximately 10.432 billion yuan) in debt after a 16-month absence. The state-owned utility reported peak investor demand of USD10.45 billion (approximately 72.676 billion yuan), representing a seven-fold oversubscription—the highest on record for a CFE bond offering.

The transaction was structured in two tranches to address distinct financial objectives. The first consists of a USD1 billion bullet bond with an eight-year maturity and an indicative yield of 6.04%, aimed at refinancing. The second is a USD500 million amortizing bond with a 25-year tenor and a 6.50% coupon, carrying a weighted average life of 12 years. Proceeds from the latter will be used to fund investment projects.

Energy Justice as a Policy Pillar

CFE’s return to capital markets comes as it accelerates its “energy justice” agenda, a concept formally incorporated into the Energy Sector Program 2025–2030. The policy prioritizes equitable access to electricity infrastructure alongside traditional market-based expansion.

In Michoacan, the utility recently completed 93 electrification projects across 38 municipalities between November and December 2025. Funded through the Universal Electric Service Fund (FSUE), the works included the installation of 778 utility poles and 105 distribution transformers, benefiting underserved populations. These efforts form part of the broader Plan Michoacan por la Paz y la Justicia, aimed at reducing infrastructure gaps in marginalized and Indigenous communities.

Strategic Planning and Outlook

The administration of President Claudia Sheinbaum has positioned energy justice alongside energy self-sufficiency and sovereignty as core national priorities. Recent legislative reforms and secondary regulations have formally recognized these principles, reinforcing the view that access to electricity must be universal and non-discriminatory. In line with this mandate, CFE has carried out thousands of infrastructure projects nationwide, pushing coverage toward near-universal levels.

Industry analysts note, however, that sustaining these social objectives will require significant capital investment to keep pace with rising industrial demand and nearshoring-driven growth. Planning frameworks such as PLADESE and the broader energy reform agenda emphasize the need to expand transmission and distribution capacity while keeping consumer electricity costs below inflation.

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