Afi School of Finance launches training programmes in finance and technology in Mexico
Fuente: Afi | 13/10/2017
Education is one of the areas which contributed most to strengthening the excellent ties between Spain and Mexico. In fact, alongside the United States, Spain is the leading destination for Mexican students.
Indeed, the Mexican financial sector is experiencing an authentic technological revolution, alongside an intensive period of regulatory reforms. The growing complexity of the national and international financial system is creating a need for professionals with a greater degree of specialisation and knowledge of the sector, generating ever greater demand for training.
As part of the presentation of the School and the specialised executive training programmes, Emilio Ontiveros, President of Analistas Financieros Internacionales and Mónica Guardado, Director General of the Afi School of Finance took part last week in various events organised in collaboration with the Mexican Banking Association (ABM), the Mexican Stock Exchange (BMV) and the Spanish Embassy in Mexico, through the representative office of the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport.
Various high profile Mexican authorities participated in these events, notably Juan Carlos Jiménez Rojas, Managing Director of the ABM, and José Oriol Bosch Par, Managing Director of BMV, as well as senior officials from the Spanish administration, such as Spain's Education Counsellor for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, Enrique Cortés de Abajo.
“Thanks to our strong links with Mexican institutions and companies, Afi School of Finance has a firm grasp of the Mexican market” explained Ontiveros, President of Analistas Financieros Internacionales and Afi School of Finance.
Thanks to the School’s strategic relationships with institutions, universities and business schools across Latin America, Afi School of Finance is now able to offer a prestigious range of specialised training programmes, which is set to expand in the coming months with programmes in finance and technology in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Brazil, Argentina and Chile.