Toto Wolff has sold a portion of his one-third ownership stake in the Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team to George Kurtz, the billionaire co-founder and CEO of CrowdStrike. The transaction, confirmed by the team, leaves Wolff retaining "a significant minority shareholding" while Kurtz joins Mercedes parent company and INEOS as the constructor's three principal owners. Financial terms were not disclosed. Kurtz's CrowdStrike trades at a $90 billion market capitalization; his personal net worth is estimated north of $6 billion.
The recapitalization arrives as Mercedes closes a two-season winless drought and prepares to field 18-year-old Andrea Kimi Antonelli alongside George Russell in 2025. Wolff, who has led the team since 2013 and delivered eight consecutive constructors' titles from 2014 through 2021, restructured his stake once before—selling one-third of his original holding to INEOS chairman Jim Ratcliffe in 2020. That deal valued the team near $1 billion and brought Ratcliffe's chemicals empire into the paddock. The Kurtz transaction suggests a similar or higher basis; comparable recent stakes in mid-tier teams have traded between $200 million and $450 million for smaller percentages.
Kurtz's entry is notable for what it is not. He brings no automotive OEM conflict, no energy-sector baggage, and no legacy motorsport ties that might clash with Mercedes' decarbonization timeline or its stated intention to run F1's first carbon-neutral power unit by 2030. CrowdStrike's core business—endpoint security software sold to 29,000 subscribers including half the Fortune 500—positions Kurtz as a technology operator fluent in the real-time data and threat-modeling vernacular that underpins modern race strategy. His firm's July 2024 software update debacle, which crashed 8.5 million Windows devices worldwide and cost the company $60 million in customer credits, demonstrated both the scale of his platform and his experience managing catastrophic reputational risk under regulatory and customer scrutiny. Team principals understand that rhythm.
The timing is clarifying. Mercedes finished fourth in the 2024 constructors' championship with 468 points, its worst result since 2011. The team has publicly committed to a youth movement around Antonelli, the Bologna-born protégé who won the 2024 Formula 2 title in his rookie season and will become the youngest driver on the 2025 grid. Wolff's willingness to dilute his equity while remaining team principal signals confidence in the technical reset—new aerodynamic regulations debut in 2026—and creates liquidity for the Wolff family office without triggering succession speculation. He turns 53 this month. Kurtz is 54. Both men are first-generation wealth builders with operational track records in high-stakes, latency-sensitive industries.
What to watch: Kurtz's first paddock appearance, likely at the March 16 Australian Grand Prix season opener in Melbourne. Whether CrowdStrike branding appears on the W16 livery or in hospitality suites—team sponsors include Petronas, IWC, and Puma, none of whom compete in enterprise software. And whether Kurtz's network introduces new technology partnerships around simulation, telemetry infrastructure, or the team's growing esports vertical, which Mercedes has treated as a talent pipeline rather than a marketing exercise. INEOS Automotive, Ratcliffe's auto brand, already supplies the team's Grenadier support vehicles; Kurtz's play is less obvious but potentially deeper.
Mercedes has now recapitalized twice in four years without surrendering operational control or Mercedes-Benz AG's anchor role as title sponsor and engine supplier. The parent company retains one-third equity, INEOS another third, and Wolff's reduced stake sits alongside Kurtz's new position in the remaining third. The structure resembles a family office co-investment vehicle more than a traditional racing team, and that is the point. F1 franchises are $200 million-per-season cost-cap businesses with ascending enterprise valuations; Andretti's failed bid priced itself near $1 billion just to enter. Wolff has now monetized his founder's position twice while keeping his desk at Brackley. Kurtz gets exposure to the world's fastest-growing major sport without building a team from scratch. The factory stays open. The engineers stay employed. And the new guy knows what a post-mortem looks like.