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Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights: Grupo Aeroportuario del Suereste, Grupo Aeroportuario del Centro Norte and Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico

For Immediate Release

Chicago, IL –January 28, 2013 – Today, Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights Features: Grupo Aeroportuario del Suereste, S.A.B de C.V. (ASR), Grupo Aeroportuario del Centro Norte, S.A.B. de C.V. (OMAB) and Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico, S.A.B. de C.V. (PAC).

3 Hot Mexican Stocks

Did you fly into Mexico for a vacation or business in 2012? If so, you weren't alone. Airport traffic, both domestic and international, in Mexico is on the upswing.

It shouldn't be surprising. The Mexican economy was the hottest in North America in 2012 with GDP growth around 4%. Unemployment is just 4.5%, the lowest in 4 years.

Growth has spurred an expansion of the middle class. When the middle class has more money, what do they want to do? Travel.

Some of Mexico's hottest resort areas saw the largest jump in passengers. Cancun International Airport, for example, saw domestic traffic rise 25% in 2012. But it wasn't all about resorts. Monterrey, Mexico's third largest city and its industrial center, saw domestic traffic rise 8.7% last year.

The surge in travel demand is being met by new low cost airlines. Interjet, Mexico's newest low cost carrier which started operating with just 7 aircraft in 2005, told Bloomberg recently it was eying a billion dollar IPO later this year. It plans to grow its 37-airplane fleet to 111 aircraft by 2015. It's also adding 20 new routes, with most of those being domestic, so that it will be servicing 70 destinations this year. The company expects air traffic to increase 50% in the next 6 years.

Interjet is also expanding internationally. In 2012, the company got regulatory approval to fly from 6 U.S. cities including Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Chicago and New York City.

3 Stocks To Cash In On Mexico's Economic Take Off

While you're going to have to wait to invest in the low cost airlines like Interjet, there's another way to cash in on the surge in travel. Buy the airport operators.

The airport operators are an interesting niche way to play Mexico's continuing growth. Economists expect Mexico's GDP to grow another 3.5% in 2013. Analysts also expect airport traffic to continue to rise. There's room for more growth as traffic is still under the 2007 Pre-Recession peak.

In the last decade, three companies have come to dominate Mexico's airport market and all three are listed on the American exchanges. They each control certain geographic regions.

Grupo Aeroportuario del Suereste, S.A.B de C.V. (ASR)

Grupo Aeroportuario del Suereste, otherwise known as Asur, operates 9 airports in the southeast of Mexico including important tourist hubs of Cancun and Cozumel along with Merida, Villahermosa, Oaxaca, Veracruz, Huatulco, Tapachula and Minatitlan. Cancun has been a big growth hub for the company. Passenger traffic jumped 11% in 2012.