Chinese tech billionaire Lin Bin has agreed to purchase a 1% stake in the holding company that controls the Miami Dolphins, valuing the franchise at $12.5 billion and marking the first significant Chinese capital entry into NFL ownership in three years.
The stake purchase, filed with league offices last week, positions the Dolphins as the second-most-valuable NFL franchise by formal transaction price, trailing only the Washington Commanders' $6.05 billion sale in 2023. Lin Bin, founder of semiconductor equipment manufacturer Wuxi Precision, paid roughly $125 million for the minority position. The holding structure includes the franchise, Hard Rock Stadium, and the team's share of F1 Miami Grand Prix hospitality rights, which generated $47 million in ancillary revenue last weekend alone.
The valuation matters because it resets the ceiling for pending sales. Seattle Seahawks prospective buyers were modeling $8-9 billion before this transaction. Now the floor is $10 billion, and the Jody Allen estate knows it. The Dolphins structure is cleaner than Seattle's—no legacy stadium debt, no city revenue-share complications—but the Lin Bin price gives every seller's banker a new comp slide. The Seahawks process, already delayed twice, will now stretch past October as bidders recalibrate.
The NFL approved Lin Bin after a nine-month review, longer than standard minority stake clearances. League sources cited enhanced Treasury Department coordination, a reference to CFIUS protocols that didn't exist when Shahid Khan bought the Jaguars. Lin Bin agreed to a non-voting position and exclusion from football operations committees, terms that mirror NBA restrictions on foreign passive investors. His Wuxi Precision has no US defense contracts, which simplified clearance. The Dolphins declined to comment on whether Lin Bin will receive suite access for the 2025 season or join the stadium naming-rights negotiation committee when Hard Rock's deal expires in 2026.
Miami's valuation includes $890 million in stadium-adjacent real estate that Stephen Ross assembled over 11 years, land that now anchors the F1 race weekend. Lin Bin's entry comes four months after Ross refinanced $400 million in stadium construction debt at 5.2%, a rate that only makes sense if the underlying asset is worth $12 billion-plus. The refinancing and the stake sale were structured separately, but the timing is clarifying. Ross needed a third-party valuation marker before the debt markets would price Miami above the Commanders.
Two things to watch: the Seahawks bidding deadline, now likely pushed to November, and whether Lin Bin's clearance opens the door for other Chinese family offices sizing NFL minority positions. Three Shanghai-based funds have contacted the league office since January, according to two people familiar with the inquiries. The NFL's foreign ownership cap remains at 10% aggregate per team, but the Lin Bin approval suggests the league is willing to absorb incremental foreign passive capital if the price is correct and the voting rights are structured out.
The Dolphins play the Chiefs in Week 9. Lin Bin is expected in the owner's box, seated between Ross and a representative from Hard Rock's parent company. The seating chart will tell you whether this was a one-time capital event or the beginning of a longer hospitality partnership. Follow the suite assignments.
The takeaway
**$12.5 billion** Dolphins valuation resets NFL pricing floor and clears path for Chinese passive capital in future minority stakes.
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