Bahrain's Mumtalakat sovereign wealth fund now owns 100% of McLaren Racing after buying out minority investors in a deal that values the Formula 1 team at £3.5 billion ($4.3B USD). The transaction closed last week without drama, marking the final exit from a 2020 debt crisis that nearly killed the brand.
Mumtalakat already held 60% before this. It bought the remaining stakes from Ares Management and MSP Sports Capital, the private equity shops that threw McLaren a £550 million lifeline in late 2020 when the team was burning cash during COVID shutdowns. Those investors are out now at a material markup. A person familiar with the exit said Ares and MSP collectively tripled their money in under four years, though exact returns depend on when tranches were deployed. Mumtalakat paid in cash.
The £3.5 billion figure puts McLaren Racing—which runs F1, IndyCar, and Formula E operations—ahead of Aston Martin F1's implied valuation after its $300 million Saudi PIF investment in early 2023. Aston's deal priced the team near £2.8 billion post-money. McLaren's number reflects both the constructor's improved on-track performance and F1's valuation surge since Liberty Media instituted the budget cap in 2021. The cap compressed operating losses and made teams bankable. Worth noting: McLaren Racing is a carveout entity. It does not include McLaren Automotive, the road-car division, which remains separate and continues to lose money.
The ownership consolidation gives team principal Andrea Stella cleaner governance for the next regulation cycle starting 2026. No more quarterly LP calls. No more capital allocation committees splitting votes on whether to fund a new simulator or a third wind tunnel shift. Mumtalakat's mandate is patient capital with a Gulf State's risk tolerance. The fund already owns 20% of Pirelli and holds stakes in multiple aerospace and logistics assets. It knows how to own hard infrastructure.
Sponsor deals should tighten now. McLaren has been pitching a stable ownership story since mid-2023, but prospective partners wanted proof. The Bahrain buyout is proof. Expect movement on the chassis title sponsor slot—currently filled by Google's Android brand through 2024 but up for renewal—and possibly a Gulf-based financial services partner to land on the engine cover by Bahrain's home race in March. One commercial director at a rival team said McLaren's rate card jumped 15% after Lando Norris signed his new deal in April; this ownership clarity adds another pricing lever.
The timing also positions McLaren for the Las Vegas paddock during the next ownership cycle. Three F1 teams are expected to explore minority sales in 2025: Williams, Haas, and possibly Alpine if Renault's board decides the brand spend no longer justifies the operational bleed. McLaren can now play introducer—connecting Mumtalakat's network to other sellers—or stay quiet and watch valuations climb. Either move works when you own 100% of an appreciating asset in a capped-cost league.
McLaren Racing generated £350 million in revenue for 2023, per filings, and operated near breakeven before interest. The F1 team finished fourth in the constructors' championship, earning roughly $80 million in prize money. That figure should rise in 2024 after a stronger second half. The budget cap sits at $135 million this year, meaning operational leverage improves as revenue grows and costs stay flat. Mumtalakat is not flipping this in three years.
Bahrain now controls the only F1 team with a footprint in three major open-wheel series and a constructor history that includes eight drivers' championships. The next question is whether Mumtalakat uses McLaren Racing as a platform to acquire adjacent assets—a tire company, a sim provider, a data analytics shop—or keeps it pure. The fund's portfolio companies include Gulf Air and Bahrain's aluminum smelter. It understands vertical integration. One former McLaren board member said the fund's five-year plan includes revenue north of £500 million by 2028, which would require new commercial deals and possibly a fourth racing series. Extreme E was floated internally last year but went nowhere.
The takeaway
Bahrain takes full control at a £3.5B valuation, eliminates PE oversight, and positions McLaren for the next sponsorship and regulation cycles with clean governance.
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