What changed: Water, power, and mobility constraints are moving from “background issues” to primary underwriting variables across Mexico’s growth corridors and tourism zones.
Why it matters to allocators:
- Constraints shape absorption: you can’t lease space or run a resort reliably without utilities and access.
- Constraint solutions create hidden capex/opex: on-site generation, water treatment, storage, redundancy – which change IRR and resilience.
- Political and community risk often concentrates here: local opposition and regulatory scrutiny frequently attach to water/power projects.
What to watch next:
- Utility upgrade timelines: interconnection queues, substation capacity, and who bears upgrade costs.
- Water availability and resilience: drought exposure, well rights, treatment capacity, and contingency planning.
- Permitting coordination risk: when multiple agencies must sign off, delays become structural, not accidental.
Questions for an IC / allocator call:
- What is our “utility risk budget” (time + money) and how is it reflected in underwriting?
- What redundancy exists for water/power interruptions, and what is the cost of downtime?
- Are we investing in a corridor with scalable infrastructure, or betting on upgrades outside our control?
Educational content only. Not investment, legal, or tax advice.
Sources consulted:
- CONAGUA (water policy and hydrology context)
- CFE (grid capacity and expansion context)
- INEGI (infrastructure and regional economic indicators)
- Municipal/state planning documents (permitting and zoning context)
- Practitioner research on resiliency capex in real assets
GCM Intelligence is sponsored by Global Capital Mobility, Inc. and GCM Fund Management. All content is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice.
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