McLaren Racing finalized a capital structure overhaul this week that hands Bahrain's sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat a 56% controlling stake, up from 38%, ending a distress cycle that began when the pandemic froze automotive cash flow and forced the parent group to secure emergency facilities against its Woking factory and classic car fleet. The transaction, structured as debt-for-equity and a $185M cash injection, removes covenant pressure that had constrained pit-wall spending and delayed wind-tunnel upgrades through the 2022 season.
The workout started in June 2020 when McLaren Group borrowed £150M from the National Bank of Bahrain using 35 Heritage Collection cars as collateral—Senna MP4/4s, Prost MP4/2s, the kind of machinery that sells privately for $8M per chassis. By late 2021, covenant breaches on separate term loans triggered cross-default clauses, and Mumtalakat stepped in with a forbearance package tied to governance reforms. Mansour Ojjeh's estate, which had held 28% through TAG, exited in the restructure; MSP Sports Capital, the American private equity vehicle that entered at 33% in 2020, diluted to 22%. The Bahrain fund's increased position aligns decision rights with funding obligation, a structure minority holders had privately called unworkable since the TAG stake passed to heirs unfamiliar with paddock burn rates.
The stabilization matters because McLaren operates in a $140M cost-cap environment where cash timing determines whether you run Friday parts on Sunday or wait until Barcelona. The team spent 2022 mid-pack despite a Mercedes power unit advantage, finishing fourth in constructors but 142 points behind Ferrari, a gap that cost roughly $18M in prize money. Engineers interviewed at Silverstone that year described delayed computational-fluid-dynamics sign-offs and a five-week lag in production tooling approvals, bureaucratic friction traced to lender-appointed observers on technical spend above £2M. Those observers are gone. The wind tunnel at Woking, mothballed for sixteen months, resumed full-shift operation in October, and the team has posted 11 podiums across 2023-2024, third-fastest development rate in the field per Autosport's correlation index.
Mumtalakat's majority control also clarifies IndyCar expansion planning, which had stalled under the prior governance stalemate. McLaren's Arrow McLaren operation runs three full-time entries in the NTT series, and team principal Zak Brown has discussed a fourth car for ovals if sponsorship thresholds clear $12M per season. The restructure removes MSP's veto over capex above $50M, which had blocked a proposed Speedway, Indiana, logistics hub. Conversations around that facility have resumed, according to two people who attend McLaren commercial council meetings, with a lease decision expected before the Long Beach round in April.
Watch for coordinator announcements in aero and race strategy, roles that went unfilled last year while the capital table sorted itself. The FIA's technical passport window opens February 15; any senior hires from Red Bull or Ferrari need to surface by then to influence the 2026 power-unit homologation car. Mumtalakat's Shaikh Mohammed bin Essa Al Khalifa, the fund's CEO, will join McLaren Racing's board formally in March, and his first board meeting coincides with the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend, which guarantees more hallway negotiation than usual.
The team's cost of capital dropped 340 basis points the day the restructure closed, per Bloomberg's credit desk, and the Heritage Collection is back in Woking, unencumbered.
The takeaway
McLaren exits two-year debt workout with Bahrain sovereign fund at **56%**, removing lender oversight that delayed aero spend and wind-tunnel shifts.
mclaren racingmumtalakatownership restructureformula 1indycarmsp sports capital
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