Raising money for private funds is hard right now. It's hard almost everywhere.
US pension funds have hit their limits. Gulf oil money is stretched thin.
So the biggest names in finance found one bright spot. That spot is Mexico.
Why Everyone Is Flying To Mexico City
The Afores are Mexico's private pension funds. They now hold close to $498 billion.
Two changes built that pile. First, a reform pushed more of each paycheck into worker accounts. Second, new rules let the funds back more private firms based abroad. That cracked the door wide open.
The rules now let the Afores put up to 30% of their money into deals like these. A few years ago, that share was much smaller.
Why does that matter? A bigger share means a lot more cash for the firms that get picked.
Most of these firms run private equity and private credit. Private credit just means loans made by funds, not banks.
The timing is rare. Picture a busy diner that just doubled its seats, and every firm wants a table.
"Mexico is currently one of the most attractive fundraising markets globally, alongside the Middle East," said Philippe Stiernon, who runs ROAM Capital. His firm works with US buyout firms across Latin America.
He says young workers and new rules put Mexico at the front of the line.
Why The Rest Of The World Dried Up
The hunt for cash got hard for a reason. Many US and Canadian funds have maxed out on private deals.
Some want their old money back before they give more. Retail money grew, but it can leave just as fast.
Private credit also had a scare this year. Some investors rushed to pull cash out of these funds.
That left firms hunting for new pools to keep lending. Even Gulf oil funds face war and big bills at home.
Against all of that, Mexico looks like an oasis.
The Race Nobody Can See Clearly
Here's the catch. The Afores don't show much about what they own.
So it's hard to know which firms are winning. The early movers set up funds the Afores can buy into.
That group includes BlackRock, Blackstone, KKR and Lexington Partners, per local exchange Biva. The rest are still knocking.
Blue Owl and Golub didn't reply to a request for comment. Ares, Lexington and Blackstone declined.
One early mover says the bond runs both ways. Sergio Mendez, who runs BlackRock in Mexico, called the tie "central to our shared growth."
For investors, this is a clue. It shows where smart money is hunting next.
What To Watch
The pot is only getting bigger. It could grow to 12 trillion pesos by 2030, up from 8.7 trillion now.
Blue Owl and Ares both trade as public stocks. Fresh cash from Mexico could feed their growth for years.
Both firms have leaned hard into private credit. A new pool like this one is exactly what they need.
That kind of growth is rare in alternative investments today. The line to get in keeps getting longer.
