Exclusive: McLaren plans to sell stake in F1 team to secure future

Exclusive: McLaren plans to sell stake in F1 team to secure future

Autocar

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Woking-based firm is planning to sell a minority stake to to stabilise its medium-term funding

McLaren is in discussions to sell a share of its Formula 1 team to fund the company’s medium-term future, Autocar can reveal.

The Woking-based firm has been hard hit by the coronavirus shutdown, repeatedly making headlines as it sought to raise funding to stay afloat as the crisis dragged on, a situation made more complicated by a clash between its shareholders and some of its bond holders as to the long-term goals for its Automotive, Racing and Applied divisions.

That situation was eased last week when McLaren secured a loan from the National Bank of Bahrain for £150m at favourable interest rates, but the firm’s shareholders are now reported to have given the go-ahead to investigate other ways of raising funds to secure the firm’s medium-term future on a stable footing for the next five years.

While plans are reported by Autocar sources to potentially include selling off part or all of Automotive and Applied Technologies, a McLaren insider insisted to Autocar that the most advanced plans were focused on selling a minority stake in the Racing division, encompassing the Formula 1 team which hit the headlines at the weekend when Briton Lando Norris scored a podium finish in the season-opening Austrian Grand Prix.

McLaren’s bond holders and board are believed to have given the go-ahead to explore offers of interest in this last week. When approached by Autocar a McLaren spokesman said: "“We are considering the option of additional investors in the Racing business."

The most recent insight into the McLaren Group’s value - comprising all three divisions of the firm - came two years ago when Michael Latifi, father of WIlliams F1 racer Nicolas Latifi, bought a 10% share for just over £200m, suggesting a valuation of more than £2bn at that time. However, with the upcoming F1 cost cap imminent, potentially making the team more profitable, it is possible that valuation, plus the team’s upturn in form, could raise the price of a share in the race team.

Parallel to this, a sale of Applied - a company which uses McLaren’s racing-derived know-how, particularly around data, technology and team work and applies it to everyday industries, most notably in health and public transport - is also believed to be being discussed. However, that is said to be complex because of the firm’s reliance on its racing team links in order to thrive.

Selling Automotive, either in part or in whole, was reported to by a source to Autocar to have been discussed, but the McLaren insider denied this was the case. McLaren announced it was cutting 1200 jobs - around a quarter of its workforce - in May, as part of a cost-cutting scheme, with the vast majority coming from the Automotive division, but the firm was highly profitable prior to the coronavirus outbreak.

No timeline for the potential sale of a stake in the F1 team has been given, but one source has suggested that talks are already well advanced, with more than one potential investor interested in the opportunity to buy in to the team.

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