CVC paid $1.7B for F1 group
Over $2bn of loans were secured in the leveraged buyout and the finance fees totaled $57m. Accountancy firm Ernst & Young alone received $2m for assisting with the debt-raising and $1.5m in due diligence fees connected to the acquisition.
Bambino, the family trust of F1 impresario Bernie Ecclestone, netted $478m from the sale, with three investment banks – JP Morgan, Lehman Brothers and Bayerische Landesbank – receiving the lion's share. They owned a 75 per cent stake in the sport which they received by being creditors of its previous owner – the fallen media giant Kirch.
The key cash-generating company in the F1 group is Formula One Administration (FOA), which holds the lucrative commercial rights to the sport and, according to its latest accounts, has annual revenues of $790m.
However, this does not include the estimated $300m generated annually by F1's trackside advertising and corporate hospitality. These revenues flow into Irish and Swiss companies which were later acquired by CVC at an estimated cost of $350m. This makes the F1 deal one of the largest ever done by CVC.
By comparison, in 1999, the private equity giant paid a total of $1.2bn for bookmaker William Hill, and four years later it jointly led a $4bn buyout of the Debenhams department store chain. The Independent