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Power behind F1’s winning global drive

For­mu­la 1’s busi­ness mod­el is unlike that of any oth­er sports series. Race tracks gen­er­al­ly do not get any rev­enue from the tele­vi­sion broad­casts of a grand prix or from F1’s cor­po­rate hos­pi­tal­i­ty and track­side adver­tis­ing. Mon­ey from these rev­enue streams goes to the sport’s rights-hold­er the F1 Group and the tracks are left to sur­vive on tick­et sales alone. It isn’t enough.

The income from tick­et sales bare­ly cov­ers the annu­al race-host­ing fee which comes to an aver­age of around $33 mil­lion. Adding to the pres­sure on race pro­mot­ers, the host­ing fees accel­er­ate by up to 10 per cent annu­al­ly thanks to esca­la­tor claus­es in the con­tracts.

Foot­ing the bill for the run­ning costs of a grand prix would dri­ve the race pro­mot­ers into loss, so it is usu­al­ly cov­ered by gov­ern­ments who invest more than $400 mil­lion in F1 races every year. They need to be wealthy nations in order to afford this which explains why For­mu­la 1 races take place in eight of the ten nations with the high­est gross domes­tic prod­uct, accord­ing to data from the World Bank. It par­tic­u­lar­ly appeals to a cer­tain type of coun­try.

The aver­age fee to host a race has risen by 18.9 per cent over the past five years

F1 is the world’s most-watched annu­al sports series and last year had 425 mil­lion tele­vi­sion view­ers. Over the past decade this has brought the sport to the atten­tion of emerg­ing mar­kets look­ing to increase their glob­al pro­file. Host­ing an F1 race puts them on the sport­ing map along­side devel­oped coun­tries. The tremen­dous vis­i­bil­i­ty on TV also pro­motes tourism, so gov­ern­ments of emerg­ing mar­kets are pre­pared to fund the host­ing fees for their races.

This has fuelled an arms race between them which has boost­ed the aver­age host­ing fee by 18.9 per cent over the past five years. The effect has been mag­ni­fied by the fact that the teams have his­tor­i­cal­ly refused to attend more than 20 races annu­al­ly, due to the time spent away from home. It puts even more of a pre­mi­um on F1’s cal­en­dar slots which con­tributes to dri­ving the price up.

Baku Race track concept in Azerbaijan

Track con­cept for Baku, cap­i­tal of Azer­bai­jan which will be host­ing a race in 2016

In turn, many races in F1’s Euro­pean heart­land have been priced out of the mar­ket. Euro­pean coun­tries don’t need to use F1 to pro­mote tourism, so their gov­ern­ments tend not to fund the host­ing fees. Accord­ing­ly, in the past decade F1 has lost races in France and Turkey, while Ger­many and Spain began to alter­nate venues annu­al­ly after pre­vi­ous­ly hold­ing two grands prix every year.

Devel­oped nations which host F1 gain through eco­nom­ic ben­e­fit from hun­dreds of thou­sands of spec­ta­tors spend­ing in the local area when they vis­it the race. One of the biggest ben­e­fi­cia­ries has been the Unit­ed States which returned to F1’s cal­en­dar in 2012 after a five-year hia­tus. The inau­gur­al race at the Cir­cuit of the Amer­i­c­as (COTA) in Austin, Texas, attract­ed 117,429 spec­ta­tors giv­ing it the sec­ond-high­est race-day atten­dance after the British Grand Prix.

Smith Trav­el Research report­ed that over the five-day peri­od end­ing on Sun­day Novem­ber 18, when the race took place, hotels in the Austin area took in $32 mil­lion, which is triple the amount made dur­ing the same peri­od the pre­vi­ous year. Hotel occu­pan­cy in down­town Austin the night before the race aver­aged at 97.8 per cent with guests pay­ing an aver­age rate of $300.44. In com­par­i­son, on the clos­est Sat­ur­day the pre­vi­ous year, the aver­age rate came to $111.40. Although the aver­age rate dropped to $266.16 on race day, this was still far high­er than the $86.52 achieved the pre­vi­ous year.

Circuit of the Americas

Fer­nan­do Alon­so, dri­ving for Fer­rari at the Cir­cuit of The Amer­i­c­as, Austin, Texas

Even bev­er­age tak­ings got a boost as Austin alco­hol sales for Novem­ber 2012 were 23 per cent high­er than the same month the pre­vi­ous year. COTA sold more beer, wine and mixed drinks in Novem­ber 2012 than any oth­er venue in Texas and made $2.8 mil­lion from this alone.

This year F1 will return to Mex­i­co City after a 23-year absence, giv­ing a record 20 races on the cal­en­dar. In 2016, it will be joined by a grand prix in Baku, cap­i­tal of oil-rich Azer­bai­jan, which will push the cal­en­dar beyond the pre­vi­ous lim­it. Time will tell whether the teams give the green light to 21 races or whether the brakes will be put on one of the races.