Shlomi Fogel's family office has acquired a minority stake in the Spain SailGP Team through a transaction valuing the franchise at approximately $30 million, according to league filings reviewed this week. The deal positions Fogel, whose wealth derives from cybersecurity exits and Israeli defense tech, as the first investor from outside the traditional sailing sponsorship ecosystem to capitalize a national team in Larry Ellison's ten-team league.
The Spanish franchise, led by CEO José Ramón Gippini and skippered by Diego Botín, launched in 2023 with backing from Iberdrola and regional tourism boards. Performance has been mid-pack—fourth place in Season 4's final standings—but the team operates one of the league's newer training facilities in Valencia and holds naming-rights inventory valued internally at $8 million annually. Fogel's stake is structured as preferred equity with board observation rights, not operational control.
SailGP's ownership architecture makes this transaction unusual. Most teams are funded by combinations of national Olympic committees, state energy companies, or billionaire hobbyists treating the asset as brand amplification. Fogel's firm approached the deal as a returns play: the league's new media rights package with CBS Sports and Sky began generating $12 million per team in annual distributions starting this season, a figure projected to reach $18 million by 2027 when the current contract cycles up. Spain's existing sponsorship base covers roughly 70 percent of operating costs, meaning the incremental media cash flows cleanly to equity. A comparable transaction—the sale of 15 percent of the New Zealand team to a Wellington venture fund last year—implied a $25 million valuation, making Spain's $30 million number a modest premium for newer infrastructure.
The Israel angle introduces geopolitical texture. Fogel's portfolio includes stakes in autonomous maritime surveillance platforms used by Mediterranean navies, and Spain recently expanded drone cooperation with Israel Aerospace Industries. Whether this connects to SailGP is unclear, but Fogel's team did tour the Valencia base with Spanish defense attachés in March. Meanwhile, SailGP has quietly explored adding an Israeli team for Season 6, contingent on securing $40 million in government and private commitments. Fogel's Spain stake could function as proof-of-concept for that effort.
Watch for Fogel's name on Spain's hospitality manifests at the next event in Jeddah, and for reports on whether his firm opens discussions with SailGP's league office about a Tel Aviv franchise bid. The Israeli Olympic sailing committee has already reserved $8 million in conditional funding if a credible operator emerges. Spain's next sponsor renewal window opens in Q1 2026, when Iberdrola's current deal expires; a restructured package that monetizes Fogel's tech network could reset the valuation higher.
The transaction was filed under Spain's securities reporting threshold but disclosed voluntarily to maintain SailGP's franchise-transfer approval process. Fogel's prior sports exposure: a $12 million loan to Maccabi Tel Aviv's basketball operation in 2019, later converted to a small equity position when the club restructured. This one he paid cash for.