Grupo Cartes was a business conglomerate owned by Paraguay's ex-president Horacio Cartes. It includes the cigarette company Tabacalera del Este (Tabesa), as well as beverage, banking, agricultural, transportation and trading interests.[2] The group said it employed about 3,500 people as of 2013.

Grupo Cartes
IndustryConglomerate
Defunct24 March 2023
FateCompanies split and reorganized; subsidiaries Frigorífico Chajhá, Dominicana Acquisition, Bebidas USA and Tabacos USA dissolved
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Horacio Cartes, Sarah Cartes (until 2023)
ProductsBanking, Trade, Transportation, Beverages, Tobacco, Agriculture
Number of employees
≈3,500[1] (2013)
SubsidiariesAerocentro, Ganadera Sofia, Banco Amambay, Tabacalera del Este, Tabacos del Paraguay, Habacorp Cigar Trading, Chajhá, Ganadera Las Pampas, Bebidas del Paraguay, Distribuidora del Paraguay, Paraguay Soccer, Consignataria de Ganado, Agrocitrus del Paraguay, Tabacos USA, FundaciAerocentro, Fundacion Rampon T. Cartes, Sporting Life, Transporte Multimodal del Paraguay, La Mision, Bebidas USA, Fundacion Ñande Paraguay
Websitewww.grupocartes.com.py

In 2023, U.S. ambassador to Paraguay Marc Ostfield announced that the Office of Foreign Assets Control banned doing financial operations in American dollars of any kind to Horacio Cartes and his enterprise.[3] This came after an investigation concluded that he actively participated in corruption actions before, during and after his period as president of Paraguay. Later, both Horacio Cartes and his sister Sarah announced that they were leaving and divesting from the conglomerate and that the Grupo Cartes's brand and structure would be changed, effective 24 March 2023. Cartes passed shares in the businesses to his legal heirs as an advance on their inheritance, with each new company group(s) operating autonomously.[4][5][6]

History

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According to the company's website, in October 1990 Cartes created the Livestock Sophia SA.[7] The Tabesa cigarette company's website, states that he was one of the founders in 1994 of the cigarette company at Hernandarias, Alto Paraná along with Horacio Cartes, Jose Angel Avalos, Marcelino Zarate Riquelme, Pedro Knight and Cesar Cabral. The company is said to employ 1,150 as of 2013 and to have taken half the marketplace from Marlboro which previously dominated.[citation needed]

The Cuban cigar company Tabacos del Paraguay S.A. was established and in 1999 the trading company Habacorp SRL was added to support the cigar brand. Agricultural business Chajha SA and Livestock Las Pampas SA also joined the group in 1999.[citation needed]

In 2001 a distributor, Distribuidora del Paraguay SRL was added. It offers brands such as Pulp and Maxi sodas, juices Puro Sol and Watt's, Schneider beer, mineral water Fountain, the Full Power sports drink, energy drink and cane Battery Estrella de Oro. Agrotabacalera of Paraguay SA in Choré, a department of San Pedro, Paraguay, was added in 2002 to provide raw materials for cigarettes. In 2004 Consignataria SA (C.G.S.A.) was added. A citrus business became part of the conglomerate in 2006 with Agrocitrus of Paraguay SA. It is located in Moisés Bertoni in the Departamento de Caazapá.[citation needed]

Recent additions include the Sporting Life store (2009) selling sporting goods for tennis, paddle, squash and table tennis on Calle San Martin 2015 c / Molas López, Neighborhood Carmelites in Asuncion and in 2009 Paraguay Multimodal Transport SA (Transporte Multimodal del Paraguay S.A.), a business logistics company. In 2010, La Misión S.A.'s three business units were added: the Paraguay Therapeutic Center with Dr. Maximum Ravenna treating obesity and other eating disorders; the restaurant Petit Bistro for service meats through Younique Goddard Catering; and Medical Spa for beauty treatment.[citation needed]

Cartes Group opened Bebidas USA to sell products under the name of "Planet Pulp" in the U.S.

In June 2012 Banco Amambay had around 2.8% of Paraguay's deposits (the 13th-largest by loan size), with its top 20 depositors accounting for 61% of its deposits.[8]

Grupo Cartes had two joint ventures with Chilean Quiñenco; Bebidas del Paraguay through Compañía de las Cervecerías Unidas and Enex Paraguay through Enex.[9] Following United States labelling of Horacio Cartes as "significantly corrupt",[10] Quiñenco executives including Andrónico Luksic and Rodrigo Hinzpeter made a controversial visit in a private jet to the Cartes mansion to negotiate an end to the joint ventures.[9][11]

Philanthropy

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On July 28, 2008, the Ramón T. Cartes foundation was opened, and it provided funding for the Arambe Education Center opened a year later to help serve children from poor families.

Grupo Cartes businesses list

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References

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  1. ^ "Grupo Cartes » Historia". Archived from the original on 2013-04-25. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  2. ^ Profile: Horacio Cartes, BBC News, 22 April 2013
  3. ^ "Embajador de EEUU pregunta sobre grupos criminales y contrabando de cigarrillos". Última Hora (in Spanish). 2023-03-16. Retrieved 2023-07-20.
  4. ^ "El mensaje de despedida de Horacio Cartes tras dejar grupo empresarial" [Horacio Cartes's farewell address after leaving business group]. Última Hora (in Spanish). 24 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  5. ^ "La marca Grupo Cartes queda en desuso tras las sanciones". Última Hora (in Spanish). 24 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  6. ^ "HC anuncia la disolución y se despide del Grupo Cartes". ABC (in Spanish). 2023-03-24. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  7. ^ Grupo Cartes Company website
  8. ^ Moody's, 11 October 2012, Rating Action: Moody's rates Banco Amambay S.A.
  9. ^ a b Cofré, Víctor; Tapia, María José (2022-08-14). "Pulso Domingo Andrónico Luksic Cómo el ex presidente de Paraguay se convirtió en un socio incómodo para el grupo Luksic". La Tercera (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-08-14.
  10. ^ Blinken, Antony. "Designation of Former Paraguayan President Horacio Manuel Cartes Jara for Involvement in Significant Corruption". United States Department of State. Retrieved 2022-07-22.
  11. ^ Sepúlveda, Nicolás; ABC Color (2022-08-07). "Cita en Paraguay: Luksic se reunió con el expresidente Cartes, su socio acusado por EE.UU. de corrupción y vínculos con el terrorismo". Ciper (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-08-14.