McLaren Racing has completed a restructure that transfers majority control to MSP Sports Capital and exits Mumtalakat, Bahrain's sovereign wealth fund, marking the formal end of a recovery arc that began when the team carried £200 million in net debt and faced serious questions about its ability to field a competitive F1 operation beyond 2020.
MSP, the New York-based sports investment vehicle led by Jahm Najafi, now holds approximately 78% of McLaren Racing. Mumtalakat, which entered in 2007 and held roughly 62% at peak exposure, has exited entirely. McLaren Group retains a 15% stake. The deal values the racing entity near $1 billion, a figure circulating among team suppliers since late November. The structure insulates McLaren Racing from McLaren Automotive's balance sheet—a separation creditors and sponsors have wanted formalized since the pandemic.
The timing is notable. Formula 1's next Concorde Agreement negotiations open in 2025, with revenue distributions resetting for the 2026-2030 cycle. Teams that can show clean capitalization and operational predictability will extract better terms. McLaren now enters those talks without debt service drag and without the risk that a bad quarter in the automotive business forces a sale of the racing IP. Zak Brown, McLaren Racing CEO, has said publicly that driver retention and technical recruitment depend on financial clarity. Lando Norris's contract runs through 2027; Oscar Piastri's through 2026. Both deals were negotiated before this ownership close, but extensions hinge on the same stability question sponsors ask: will the team still be here, under this management, in five years.
MSP's thesis is straightforward. Najafi and his team believe F1 team valuations will compress upward as the sport's North American audience grows and as the 2026 engine regulations force weaker operators to either spend or sell. McLaren's brand carries enterprise value independent of grid position—apparel, licensing, esports adjacency—but MSP's model assumes the team finishes in the top four of the Constructors' Championship consistently. That requires budget discipline and driver continuity, which requires not having Bahrain's finance ministry on the cap table.
Mumtalakat's exit is cleaner than it appears. The fund entered when McLaren Group needed capital to survive the 2008 financial crisis. It never took board control of the racing team directly, but its presence complicated decision-making whenever McLaren Automotive needed restructuring. In 2020, McLaren Group sold its headquarters and took £150 million in loans secured against its Formula 1 assets and historic car collection. MSP arrived in 2021 with a £185 million investment that bought 33% of the racing business and included an option to increase. That option has now been exercised, and Mumtalakat's position unwound in a transaction that sources describe as negotiated over eighteen months.
What this does not resolve: McLaren's cost-cap performance relative to Red Bull, Ferrari, and Mercedes, all of which have deeper technical benches and better windtunnel hours heading into 2026. The $135 million cap theoretically levels resources, but Mercedes and Ferrari have entire road-car engineering divisions that can be reoriented toward F1 problems without appearing on the cap. McLaren sold its applied-technologies unit in 2021. MSP's capital allows the team to hire, but it does not manufacture institutional depth.
What it does provide: a single decision-maker with a ten-year horizon. Brown reports to Najafi, who reports to MSP's LPs, most of whom are family offices and endowments expecting hold periods that survive one bad season. That is a different incentive structure than a sovereign fund rotating ministers every election cycle or a public automotive company defending quarterly earnings.
The immediate follow-ons are personnel. McLaren has openings for a chief aerodynamicist and a head of vehicle dynamics, both positions that require signing someone from a top-three team. Those negotiations are easier when the candidate knows the ownership won't flip in two years. Sponsorship renewals are also in play. Dell, Cisco, and Google are up in 2025 and 2026. McLaren's ability to ask for increases depends on demonstrating that it will be on the grid, in this configuration, through the next regulation cycle.
MSP's other holdings include a 25% stake in RF Investments, which owns Steelers and Penguins minority positions, and a piece of Elevate Sports Ventures. The playbook is consistent: buy into legacy brands with IP moats, rationalize the cap table, then extract value from digital and licensing extensions. Formula 1 teams are undermonetized relative to NFL franchises on a per-fan basis, especially in North America. McLaren's Las Vegas paddock activation in November reportedly drew 3,200 guests across three days, most of them corporate. The business model MSP is betting on is that those guests eventually buy $400 team jackets and $180 paddock experiences, not that McLaren wins the championship.
The last comparable transaction was Andretti's pursuit of full F1 entry, which failed in part because existing teams perceived new entrants as dilutive. McLaren's restructure avoids that problem by staying inside the ten-team structure while improving its negotiating position for the next commercial reset. When Concorde talks open next year, McLaren will be one of three teams—alongside Ferrari and Mercedes—that can credibly threaten to sit out if terms worsen. That leverage is worth more than finishing third instead of fourth.