Formula 1 signed a multi-year extension with Disney Consumer Products days before the Shanghai Grand Prix, folding F1 Academy into the licensing agreement, and closed a separate partnership with Standard Chartered, Liverpool FC's front-of-shirt sponsor. The Disney deal now covers merchandise, apparel, and consumer products across both the main series and the all-female junior category. No figures disclosed, though similar Formula 1 licensing packages with global consumer brands have carried $15M-$20M annual minimums since 2022. Standard Chartered's arrangement—terms undisclosed—positions the bank alongside Heineken, Rolex, and DHL in the sport's top sponsorship tier.
The timing matters. F1 Academy enters its third season in 2025 with 15 races on the calendar, up from 7 in its 2023 debut. Disney's expansion follows the Academy's first U.S. broadcast window—ESPN carried qualifying and feature races in 2024—and precedes the category's planned integration into Grand Prix weekend schedules at six circuits this year. Tasia Filippatos, president of Disney Consumer Products, confirmed the deal includes dedicated Academy product lines launching in Q3 2025, timed to the Austin and Miami rounds. The licensing extension runs through 2028, covering the 2026 powertrain regulation change and the likely arrival of Cadillac as the sport's 11th constructor in 2026 or 2027.
Standard Chartered's entry is harder to read. The bank sponsors Liverpool, Marseille, and several cricket properties, but this is its first global motorsport commitment. Standard Chartered operates 53 branches across mainland China and Hong Kong; Formula 1 returns to Shanghai this weekend after a five-year COVID absence, and the circuit holds a contract through 2025 with renewal negotiations live. The bank also maintains corporate partnerships in Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand—markets where F1 has added or extended races since 2023. The deal structure mirrors Santander's decade-long run as a Ferrari partner: activation in key retail markets, B2B hospitality, and executive access, not television impressions.
The Academy extension matters more than the financial term suggests. Disney already held F1 media rights through ESPN in the U.S. and Star elsewhere; adding Academy licensing creates a vertically integrated youth and women's audience play. The category's grid includes drivers as young as 16, feeding Mercedes, Alpine, and Williams junior programs. Merchandise revenue from Academy-branded product could reach $8M-$12M annually by 2027 if the category maintains its current growth trajectory, a meaningful figure given F1's total licensing and merchandise revenue hit $1.2B in 2023. Disney's willingness to extend through 2028 suggests confidence in the Academy's standalone commercial future, separate from its function as a feeder series.
Watch Standard Chartered's activation spend across the Asian swing—Shanghai this month, then Japan, Azerbaijan, and Singapore between now and September. If the bank books multi-city B2B events or launches co-branded credit products in those markets, the deal is worth more than the press release implies. Also watch whether F1 announces a Shanghai contract extension before the end of Q2; Standard Chartered's presence makes that likelier. Disney's Academy merchandise should appear at Circuit of the Americas in October; if it doesn't, the timeline slipped.
Formula 1 has now signed 14 new or extended partnerships since the start of 2024, including Lenovo, AWS expansions, and the returning Cadillac constructor deal. The Academy licensing add-on costs Disney almost nothing in rights fees but creates a merchandising vertical that didn't exist two years ago. Standard Chartered's arrival in a non-alcohol, non-watch category opens another sponsorship lane before the 2026 powertrain change forces teams and the commercial rights holder to reset constructor and chassis economics. The next six months will clarify whether these are placeholder deals or the foundation for a broader reorganization of F1's sponsor portfolio around electrification and emerging markets.
The takeaway
Disney extends F1 licensing through **2028** to include Academy merchandise; Standard Chartered enters as global partner ahead of Shanghai GP return and likely circuit renewal.
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