Grupo Senda Explained

Grupo Senda Autotransporte, S.A. de C.V.
Type:Sociedad Anónima Bursátil de Capital Variable
Foundation:1930
Location:Monterrey, Mexico
Industry:Bus Transportation
Key People:Ricardo Clausse Torres
Num Employees:7,500
Homepage:Grupo Senda

Grupo Senda is a private bus and coach operator providing services mainly in the northwest and centre of Mexico, as well as the United States through its subsidiary Turimex Internacional. The company also offers school bus services, parcel delivery services and courier services[1]

History

The company was founded in 1934 as "Transportes Tamaulipas" by Don Protasio Rodríguez Cuellar in Linares, Nuevo León, Mexico and originally offered routes between Villa Mainero in Tamaulipas and Linares.[2]

The original vehicle was a truck to which Protasio Rodríguez fitted wooden planks and could carry up to 16 passengers. In 1937, Protasio Rodríguez collected together a number of transport companies under the name "Transportes Aztecas" but he ended his relationship with this collection of companies and reverted to operating under the original name. In 1955, Grupo Senda became the new name for the company and in 2004 it acquired "Transportes del Norte", a company that specialised in transport for the tourism industry. Today, the company operates a number of different subsidiaries including del Norte, Transportes del Norte Diamante, Turimex Internacional, Coahuilenses, Tamaulipas and Sendor. It also operates Senda Citi for school transportation.[3]

In 2017, an analysis of the company's performance by HR Ratings de México noted that although total sales had increased, it was expected that the company would restructure its debt. It noted that a new strategy by the company to increase the load factor per route, that is, more passengers per vehicle but less frequency of service on each route, had negatively effected the company's ability to service its debt.[4] In July 2018, the company requested to be declared commercially insolvent, however the petition was dismissed by the courts. In 2019, their creditors filed a petition to declare the company insolvent and although their petition was initially dismissed, a court of appeal overturned the original decision.[5] In 2022 the company announced it had reached an agreement with the majority of its creditors which allowed it to restructure over 3.6 billion pesos over a period of 8 years and a possible capitalization of debt with conditions to ensure continued operations.[6]

Description

As of 2023, the company operates more than 2,450 vehicles and carries more than 80 million passengers annually.[7]

The company operates in 12 states in Mexico.

Routes - Mexico
StateCity
AguascalientesAguascalientes
ChihuahuaChihuahua, Ciudad Juárez, Delicias, Jiménez, Parral
Mexico CityMexico City
CoahuilaCiudad Acuña, Cautro Ciénegas, Monclova, Muzquiz, Nava, Nueva Rosita, Piedras Negras, Sabinas, Saltillo, Torreón
DurangoDurango, Gómez Palacio
JaliscoGuadalajara, Lagos de Moreno, San Juan de los Lagos
Nuevo LeónBustamante, China, Linares, Montemorelos, Monterrey
QuerétaroQuerétaro
San Luis PotosíCiudad Valles, Matehuala, Real de Catorce, San Luis Potosí, Tamazunchale
SinaloaMazatlán
TamaulipasCiudad Mante, Ciudad Victoria, Matamoros, Nuevo Laredo, Reynosa, Tampico
ZacatecasZacatecas

Through its wholly owned subsidiary, the company operates in a further 12 states in the United States.[8] [9]

Routes - United States
StateCity
AlabamaBirmingham, Montgomery, Tuscaloosa
ArkansasLittle Rock
GeorgiaAtlanta, Dalto, Fort Valley, Gainesville, Roswell
IllinoisChicago, Kankakee
KansasWichita
LouisianaBaton Rouge, Lafayette
MississippiBiloxi, Forest, Pearl
North CarolinaCharlotte, Concord, Durham, Gastonia, Greensboro, Raleigh, Salisbury, Sanford, Winston-Salem
OklahomaOklahoma, Tulsa
South CarolinaAnderson, Gaffney, Newberry, Spartanburg
TennesseeChattanooga, Cleveland, Memphis
TexasArlington, Austin, Dallas, Eagle Pass, Fort Worth, Houston, Laredo, McAllen, San Antonio, Waco

Urban anthropology studies of Hispanic-oriented migration

Studies of Hispanic transportation services to and from central Mexico show that more than 50 firms compete for customers and the industry has become more regulated and competitive. Turimex, a wholly-owned subsidiary, focuses almost entirely on this market with large terminals in five cities in Texas and with a first-class service to and from Mexico since 2003.[10] Turimex originally started with only 3 buses covering 2 main routes and by 2008 operated 54 buses covering 12 routes and acquired several other smaller bus companies in this time.

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20230601075614/https://www.emis.com/php/company-profile/MX/Grupo_Senda_SA_de_CV_es_3732503.html Research Report by EMIS analysts on Grupo Senda (archive)(paywall)
  2. https://issuu.com/casasymas/docs/bizz_19/21 Company Profile in Bizz Magazine 19 June 2016
  3. http://www.pasajero7.com/grupo-senda-abriendo-abriendo-caminos-1930/ History of Grupo Senda "GRUPO SENDA OPENING ROADS SINCE 1930" Passerjo - December 2019
  4. https://www.hrratings.com/pdf/Reporte_Grupo%20Senda_20170926.pdf Grupo Senda analysis, HR Ratings HR BBB-HR3 28 Sept 2017
  5. https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=66afd9d7-6ad0-45c4-9b7a-503c328f312f An interview with a partner of lawfirm Martínez Algaba de Haro Curiel
  6. Web site: 2022-10-10 . Grupo Senda logra acuerdo con acreedores y concluye concurso mercantil . Telediario México . es-MX.
  7. https://ticket.gruposenda.com/es/grupo-senda/item/196-acerca-de-grupo-senda Statistics from Grupo Senda website
  8. Web site: Grupo Senda Company Overview & News . 2023-06-06 . Forbes . en.
  9. Web site: Andraca . Angel . 2019-01-05 . Betterez signs deal with Grupo Senda to expand into Latin American market . 2023-06-06 . LatamList . en-US.
  10. Kemper . Robert V. . From Undocumented Camionetas (Mini-Vans) To Federally Regulated Motor Carriers: Hispanic Transportation In Dallas, Texas, and Beyond. . Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development . 2007 . 36 . 4 . The Institute Inc . 381–423 . 40553632 . Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development .