Formula
One could have new owners by the end of the year with three parties
currently interested, the sport's commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone
said on Tuesday.
"Our
shareholders at the moment are basically in such a position where they
have to lose some of their shares, or all of them, shortly," the
84-year-old Briton told a Camp Beckenbauer Global Summit in Kitzbuehel,
Austria, in a telephone interview.
"That's the way things are set up for them," he added.
"There
has been a lot of interest and I would say there are three parties at
the moment. I'd be surprised if one of them don't buy very shortly."
Asked what sort of timeframe was likely, Ecclestone replied: "This year."
Ecclestone did not name any of the interested parties.
CVC Capital Partners are currently the controlling shareholders with a 35.5 percent stake, while Ecclestone holds 5.3 percent.
U.S. investment groups BlackRock and Waddell & Reed, along with Norway's Norges Bank, are among other shareholders.
Reports
in June suggested that RSE Ventures, the investment vehicle of Miami
Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, was teaming up with Qatar Sports
Investments to buy CVC's stake in a potential $7 billion-$8 billion
deal.
CVC's co-chairman Donald Mackenzie told Reuters in July, however, that the rights holders were under no pressure to sell.
"We
like owning it (Formula One), we don't want to sell it. There are
always some people who'd like to buy it, it's a very good business," he
said.
CVC
sold down its holding from 63 percent in 2012 in deals that at the time
gave the business an enterprise value, which includes debt and equity,
of $9.1 billion.
Ecclestone
told Reuters separately in July that "lots of people have made
approaches" and indicated he too might be interested in a takeover or
buyout.
"Donald
Mackenzie doesn't want to sell, simple as that," he said then. "He
loves Formula One, loves the business. He may have to sell his shares.
"Whether he will invest himself, maybe with me separately, we will have to wait and see."
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