Xiaomi co-founder Lin Bin agreed to purchase a 1% stake in the holding company that controls the Miami Dolphins for $125 million, valuing the franchise at $12.5 billion and establishing the highest disclosed NFL franchise valuation to date.
The transaction places the Dolphins 22% above the Washington Commanders' $6.05 billion sale to Josh Harris in July 2023 and sets a new pricing benchmark as the Seattle Seahawks prepare for an expected $7-8 billion sale process later this year. Lin, whose net worth Forbes estimates at $13.4 billion, joins Stephen Ross's ownership group through a minority stake structure that does not require full NFL ownership approval but passed league vetting for passive investors. The deal was structured through the parent holding company rather than direct franchise equity, a distinction that matters for foreign nationals navigating NFL ownership restrictions.
The valuation implies the Dolphins now trade at roughly 11x trailing revenue, compared to the Commanders' 9.5x multiple last year. That compression reflects three factors: the NFL's new media deals delivering $380 million per team annually through 2033, Miami's stadium renovation completing a $560 million upgrade that added premium inventory, and the Dolphins' market ranking third in the league for corporate sponsorship density after New York and Los Angeles. Lin's entry also creates a template for other foreign billionaires seeking NFL exposure without triggering the league's prohibition on majority foreign ownership—a structure that several family offices in the Middle East and Asia have been exploring since the Commanders sale.
The timing matters because Seattle's sale, expected to launch formal bidding in Q2 2025, now has a valuation ceiling to test. If the Seahawks clear $8 billion, it confirms that large-market franchises with new stadiums command a structural premium, and it likely pulls forward sale timelines for the Carolina Panthers and Tennessee Titans, both of which have aging ownership groups and stadium lease uncertainties. The Dolphins deal also creates downstream pressure on the NBA and English Premier League, where recent sales (Phoenix Suns at $4 billion, Chelsea at $5.3 billion) now look relatively affordable compared to NFL entry points.
What to watch: whether the Seahawks sale in mid-2025 exceeds $8 billion, which would further widen the NFL's valuation gap over other leagues; whether other Chinese or Middle Eastern investors approach teams for similar minority structures before the next full ownership transition; and whether the Dolphins' sponsorship revenue, currently estimated near $65 million annually, jumps after Lin's networks open access to Chinese consumer brands seeking U.S. sports partnerships. Lin's first appearance at a Dolphins game is expected Week 1 of next season, and his seating location—owner's box versus luxury suite—will signal whether this is financial diversification or a precursor to a larger stake.
The Dolphins declined to comment on the structure. Lin's spokesman confirmed the investment but did not provide deal terms. The NFL office confirmed the transaction passed league review but noted it does not require formal ownership vote approval for stakes under 5%.