Context: How Bolsa de Valores Nacional works, and what it makes issuers disclose · Guatemala on the LatAm Power Map
Inversiones Cuneo, S.A. is one of a small number of private companies that raise money from Guatemala’s capital market — but in a country where listed firms rarely publish financials in the open, its numbers remain locked behind closed doors.
| Full name | Inversiones Cuneo, S.A. |
|---|---|
| Ticker / exchange | INVCUNEO.GT — Bolsa de Valores Nacional, S.A. (BVN), Guatemala City |
| Headquarters | Guatemala City, Guatemala (presumed; not disclosed in available sources) |
| Sector | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Employees | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Market value (market cap) | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Yearly sales (revenue) | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Net profit | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Net margin | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Return on equity | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Price-to-earnings ratio | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Dividend yield | Not disclosed in available sources |
| Website | Not disclosed in available sources |
What it is
Inversiones Cuneo, S.A. is registered as an active emitter on the Bolsa de Valores Nacional de Guatemala (BVN), placing it among the country’s small cohort of private companies that access public capital markets. Its specific operating sector — whether investment holding, real estate, agribusiness, finance, or another industry — is not disclosed in any publicly available source found after exhaustive search.
Guatemala’s exchange concentrates almost entirely on fixed income instruments — bonds and short-term debt — and unlike larger Latin American markets, it has no developed equity segment. This means Inversiones Cuneo almost certainly uses the BVN to raise debt (promissory notes or bonds), not to list shares for trading.
Who owns it
The “Cuneo” name suggests a founding family, likely of Italian origin — a pattern common among Guatemala’s 19th- and 20th-century merchant dynasties. Controlling shareholder identity, ownership percentage, and free float are not disclosed in any publicly available source found after exhaustive search.
Guatemala’s corporate law allows sociedades anónimas to maintain shareholder identity in private internal registers, granting a high degree of confidentiality — which helps explain why ownership data for many BVN issuers is effectively invisible to the public.
Who runs it
The names of the chief executive, chief financial officer, and board chair are not disclosed in any publicly available source found after exhaustive search, including the BVN’s emitter registry and the Registro del Mercado de Valores y Mercancías.
The money, in plain words
Revenue, net profit, total assets, and all derived ratios — net margin, return on equity, price-to-earnings ratio, and dividend yield — are not disclosed in any publicly available source found after exhaustive search. No audited annual report, memoria anual, or financial filing for Inversiones Cuneo could be retrieved from the BVN, the Registro del Mercado de Valores, or any other source.
The BVN makes general and financial information available for listed emitters under Article 29 of its Internal Regulations and the Disclosure Regulation for Issuing Entities, but in practice the BVN’s emitter pages were inaccessible during research (SSL certificate failure; HTTP 403 Forbidden), and no cached or mirrored financial data for Inversiones Cuneo appeared in any search index.
What it is doing now
No recent material event — deal, leadership change, new debt issuance, regulatory action, or quarterly result — for Inversiones Cuneo could be found in any publicly available source. The most recent verifiable fact is that it remained on the BVN’s active-emitter list as of 2014, the date of the only indexed source naming it; its current status could not be independently confirmed.
What to watch
- Exchange transparency: The BVN publishes emitter data under its disclosure regulations, and the authenticity of that content is the strict responsibility of the issuers themselves — meaning any improvement in disclosure depends on the company, not just the regulator.
- Debt rollovers: In Guatemala’s debt-focused market, the key event for a private emitter is whether it renews or expands its promissory-note programme — watch the BVN’s primary-market announcements for any new Cuneo issuance.
- Sector risk: Guatemala’s sovereign rating was upgraded by S&P to BB (stable outlook) in 2023, a broadly supportive backdrop for private-sector borrowers — but company-specific risk cannot be assessed without financial statements.
Sources
- Bolsa de Valores Nacional, S.A. (BVN) — Emisores Activos page: https://www.bvnsa.com.gt/bvnsa/emisores_activos.php (accessed July 2026; returned HTTP 403; listing confirmed via cached third-party index)
- DeGuate.com — “Emisores de la Bolsa de Valores de Guatemala” (July 2014 listing confirming Inversiones Cuneo, S.A. as active BVN emitter): https://www.deguate.com/economia/articulos/emisores-de-la-bolsa-de-valores-de-guatemala.shtml
- Bolsa de Valores Nacional, S.A. — Investor Centre / Exchange overview: https://www.bvnsa.com.gt/ci/inicio.php
- Hapi Trade — “Guatemala Stock Exchange: what is the BVG and how does it work” (February 2026): https://hapi.trade/en/blog/guatemala-stock-exchange-what-is-the-bvg-and-how-does-it-work
- Consortium Legal — “Guía para invertir en Guatemala: tipos societarios” (September 2025): https://consortiumlegal.com/2025/09/26/guia-para-invertir-en-guatemala-tipos-societarios-permisos-y-efectos-tributarios/
- Market data: EODHD (no financial data available for INVCUNEO.GT).
This is news, not investment advice.
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