Shares of Grupo Elektra have plunged to the lowest since 2007, wiping $US5.8 billion ($9 billion) from the fortune of controlling shareholder Ricardo Salinas Pliego and pushing him out of the world’s top 500 wealthiest list.
The stock tumbled 16 per cent to 230 pesos in Mexico City, extending the previous day’s 71 per cent decline. Elektra was trading at 944.95 pesos in July when Salinas triggered a trading halt, alleging he was a victim of potential fraud.
His lawyers claimed a creditor had used the company’s shares to fund a $US110 million loan, and later discovered most of the shares appeared to have been sold, pushing the stock price down. The rest, they say, was pocketed by the creditor, who has denied any wrongdoing.
After a month of no trading, Elektra was kicked out of the country’s benchmark index. That’s now putting pressure on the shares as exchange-traded funds managed by BlackRock and The Vanguard Group have to sell.
Elektra had tried to stop trading from resuming, saying it could cause “irreparable damage.” On Monday, the company reiterated the claims, adding that anyone dealing in the stock could be held responsible and that there was a “high risk of transactions being carried out with shares introduced in the market in an improper manner.”
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“It is our obligation to reiterate that the resumption of trading in these, in addition to causing irreparable damage, could involve shares obtained improperly,” Grupo Salinas spokesman Luciano Pascoe said in a response to questions.
Monday’s plunge pushed Salinas out of the world’s top 500 wealthiest list. His stake of about 75 per cent in the Elektra is now worth some $US1.9 billion, down from $US7.6 billion on Friday. That gives him a net worth of $US4.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
“You guys are real idiots,” Salinas wrote on X in response to posts about the drop in his wealth.