Spain Climbs To No. 2 In Latin America’s

Spain Climbs To No. 2 In Latin America’s
November 7, 2025

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Spain Climbs To No. 2 In Latin America’s

Spain now ranks just behind the United States as a source of investment stock in Latin America, reflecting a decade-long build-out led by Mexico and Brazil and reinforced by thousands of smaller Spanish firms.

Start with the map. Mexico holds the largest share of Spanish capital in the region (about €70.8 billion by 2023), benefiting from supply-chain realignment into North America.

Banks (BBVA, Santander) anchor consumer and SME finance; Spanish industrials and logistics groups supply warehouses, components, software integration, and grid connections that make nearshoring work.

Brazil is the long-duration base. Spanish investment stock there exceeds €53 billion, concentrated in networks and services that compound over time: electricity distribution and renewables (Neoenergia/Iberdrola), airports (Aena’s Congonhas-led portfolio), fiber and 5G, and universal banking.

These are patient bets that rely on contracts being honored and regulators sticking to the rulebook. Argentina, despite volatility, shows the depth of the footprint: more than €47 billion in accumulated Spanish investment across banking, gas distribution, and services.

The Long-Term Story: Spain Climbs To No. 2 In Latin America’s Investment Ranks. (Photo Internet reproduction)

The assets are tangible—branches, payrolls, pipes, and wires—so capital stays when policies are predictable and moves carefully when they are not.

Spanish investment deepens Latin America’s infrastructure roots

Chile and Colombia illustrate the “quiet build.” In Chile, Spanish companies are embedded in toll roads, water, and energy services; in Colombia, they help finance and operate fourth-generation road concessions and power networks, with recent refinancings signaling confidence in long-term cash flows.

Peru adds transmission lines, engineering, and water concessions to the picture. Two shifts explain the momentum. First, the composition: since the pandemic, flows have tilted toward productive, on-the-ground investment rather than passive holding structures.

Second, the breadth: for every Spanish firm trimming exposure last year, several increased their stakes; over the past decade, the number of Latin American companies with majority Spanish ownership multiplied several times over.

Much of that comes from micro, small, and mid-sized investors that do not make headlines but do build factories, services, and software. The takeaway for readers outside the region is practical.

Where rules are clear, budgets disciplined, and public-private partnerships credible, Spanish money stays longer and builds deeper—strengthening the power you use, the roads and airports you travel, and the financial rails your business depends on.

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