Cementos Molins jumps to continuous market and seeks more liquidity

Published on June 22, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Cementos Molins will ask its shareholders for authorization so that its board can make the leap to the Continuous Market. According to the company, this move aims to improve the liquidity of its shares and facilitate the entry of new investors. For the average citizen, this means the company is betting on greater transparency and financial stability, which could open the door to small savers looking to diversify their portfolio.

photorealistic technical illustration of a cement factory transitioning to a stock market trading floor, cement silos morphing into digital trading screens showing green upward arrows, concrete blocks transforming into glowing stock certificates, a construction crane lifting a giant stock ticker tape displaying financial data, workers in hard hats monitoring both industrial machinery and financial trading terminals, dramatic lighting from above highlighting the connection between industrial production and market liquidity, cinematic engineering visualization, ultra-detailed mechanical and digital elements, realistic materials concrete and steel blending with LED screens, shallow depth of field focusing on the transformation process

How financial technology facilitates the transition to the Continuous Market 📈

The process of migrating from the Alternative Stock Market to the Continuous Market involves an upgrade of reporting and control systems. Automated trading platforms and high-frequency algorithms require real-time data, forcing companies to implement more robust financial management software. Cementos Molins will need to adapt its technological infrastructure to meet the transparency and speed standards required by this market, a step that is often complex but necessary to attract international investment funds.

From brick to bit: when cement goes digital 🏗️

Now it turns out that to sell cement, it's no longer enough to have good concrete mixers; you also need to master the art of algorithmic trading. The company will go from being the queen of construction sites to a star of candlestick charts. The next thing will be to see construction workers with five-monitor setups on site, deciding whether to bet on bricks or on Portland cement futures. At least, if the stock market crashes, they'll always have the real business: building.