Cifra, S.A. de C.V. was at one time Mexico's largest retailer, and its second largest publicly owned company, and, according to a 1993
Euromoney survey, Latin America's best-run company. Among Mexican retailers Cifra was the first to be publicly owned, offer generic brands, and include clothing, food, and hardware within a single store. Cifra was founded in 1958 by
Jerónimo Arango. The son of a Spanish immigrant to Mexico who prospered in the textile business, Arango spent his youth studying art and literature in the U.S. and traveling there and in Spain and in Mexico. While in New York City he saw a crowd waiting patiently for the opportunity to enter
E.J. Korvette, a pioneer
discount department store located in the old
Saks Fifth Avenue-34th Street store. Impressed by Korvette's success, he persuaded his father to lend him the equivalent US$240,000 to open a similar store with his two brothers, Plácido and Manuel. Called
Aurrera Bolĺvar, the discount store opened in
downtown Mexico City in 1958. Like Korvette's, Aurrerá Bolivar was an immediate success and drew resentment from established retailers, who felt threatened by competition by the newcomer with its low prices, around 20% less than manufacturers's list prices, in contrast to existing retailers who sold around 40–45% higher than list price. Soon the Arangos had to locate alternative suppliers in other parts of the country because the original ones were afraid of their other customers, rivals of Aurrerá, boycotting them. Aurrerá exposed it rivals' tactics during its sponsorship of the popular television show
The 64,000 Peso Question. By 1965 there were eight Aurrerá stores doing US$16 million in sales. The company's first
Superama supermarket opened in 1960 and the first
Vip restaurant (later
VIPS) in 1964. In this first step of Walmart in Mexico, begins to open more branches by all the Mexican republic under the name "Walmart Supercenter", with this begins the disappearance of Group Enciphers. In 1998 the group launched the format
Bodega Aurrerá, stores smaller than Almacenes Aurrerá and which were very different to Walmart and Aurrerá. In 2000 the groupchanged its name to
Walmart de México and a year later all the Aurrerá stores were converted to Walmart Supercenters leaving Bodega Aurrerá as the only other store format. == Formats ==