Toto Wolff sold a portion of his 33% Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 stake to George Kurtz, the $91 billion CrowdStrike founder, in a deal that values the team north of $2 billion and marks the first external capital injection into the Silver Arrows' ownership structure since its 2010 formation. Wolff retains operational control as Team Principal and CEO. Mercedes-Benz AG holds the remaining 67%, though Stuttgart sources indicate the parent company is exploring partial divestment ahead of a broader motorsport portfolio review tied to its electrification roadmap. Kurtz joins McLaren Racing investor MSP Sports Capital in the small cohort of tech billionaires rotating into F1 equity after missing the initial SPAC-era valuations.
McLaren Racing separately closed a $400 million minority investment from Kuwait's Ares Management affiliate, diluting existing shareholders including MSP and Bahrain's Mumtalakat sovereign fund. The capital underwrites McLaren's Indianapolis 500 expansion and Formula E entry, both announced within 48 hours of the ownership filing. Zak Brown, CEO, told sponsors the new structure positions McLaren to bid on a second F1 grid slot if the FIA reopens applications post-2026, though the $200 million entry fee remains a non-starter without Saudi or Qatari backing. Worth noting: Brown's personal stake dropped below 5% in the transaction, though his earn-out tied to the team's 2025 constructor finish remains untouched.
Red Bull GmbH confirmed Thailand's Chalerm Yoovidhya family increased its ownership from 51% to 60% after acquiring a portion of Dietrich Mateschitz's estate share, which had been held in probate since his October 2022 death. The Yoovidhya move consolidates control and removes a potential activist entry point that had worried Helmut Marko and Christian Horner during Red Bull Racing's 2023 budget cap dispute. Team valuation was pegged at $3.8 billion in the transaction, a 40% premium to Liberty Media's internal franchise model. Oracle, Red Bull's title sponsor since 2022, was offered right-of-first-refusal but declined, directing capital instead toward its $250 million McLaren Applied partnership announced the same week. The Oracle-McLaren deal includes IP licensing for the Woking simulator software that Red Bull previously licensed under a now-lapsed 2019 agreement.
The three simultaneous moves reflect Formula 1's maturation into a liquid alternative asset class. Liberty Media's 2017 acquisition normalized institutional ownership structures and quarterly earnings calls; the 2021 Netflix boom added consumer brand equity; and the 2023 Las Vegas Grand Prix delivered proof-of-concept for North American monetization at $500 million+ in economic impact. Family offices and sovereign funds now model F1 teams on NBA franchise comparables, with 10-year IRR targets in the mid-teens assuming cost cap compliance and stable commercial rights distribution. Automotive OEMs, conversely, face board pressure to exit or dilute: Audi's $650 million Sauber acquisition in 2023 is the last full manufacturer entry expected before the 2030 powertrain regulations force another capital cycle. Mercedes' partial exit—if executed—would leave Ferrari as the sole legacy automaker holding majority control of its F1 operation.
Paddock chatter centers on two follow-on transactions. Wolff is understood to be courting a second external investor to further reduce his personal exposure while maintaining veto rights over team strategy. Names circulating include Brad Jacobs, the $8 billion logistics entrepreneur who walked Red Bull's Milton Keynes facility in March, and a London-based family office with existing Premier League holdings. McLaren's Ares capital, meanwhile, comes with a two-year option to convert 15% of its stake into equity of McLaren Group, the debt-laden parent company that still owns the F1 team, the automotive division, and the applied technologies unit. Conversion would trigger Mumtalakat's 2020 rescue terms and force a broader restructuring that could separate the racing business entirely.
The FIA's new 2026 technical regulations—featuring simplified power units and active aerodynamics—reset the competitive order in 18 months, making current ownership windows the last chance to acquire before on-track results reprice valuations. Red Bull's four consecutive constructors' titles have doubled its enterprise value since 2020; Mercedes' winless 2024 campaign has created the buying opportunity Kurtz exploited. Sponsors are adjusting: Oracle's McLaren pivot, Petronas' quiet Mercedes extension talks, and Red Bull's renegotiation of its Thai namesake beverage deal all price in ownership volatility. The next datapoint arrives when Mercedes files its Q1 2025 parent company results in late April, which must disclose the Kurtz transaction's accounting treatment and any board discussions regarding further dilution. Horner, speaking at pre-season testing, declined to address whether Red Bull would sell a minority stake but noted "the family is always open to smart capital."
The takeaway
Three F1 ownership rotations in one week signal institutionalization complete; Mercedes' first external investor and McLaren's Ares option set up broader restructurings before **2026** regs.
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