An investor group led by buyout firm HIG Capital is poised to acquire the financially troubled Nürburgring race track in Germany, two sources familiar with the transaction said on Wednesday.
The circuit went into helloistration in 2012 after local politicians loaded it with debt equating to around 50 years worth of profit, and the famed and once-feared track started looking for a new owner in the spring of 2013. The HIG consortium has already registered the acquisition of substantial parts of Nürburgring assets with the German competition authority, the Federal Cartel Authority said on its website.
HIG is paying no more than 60-70 million Euros ($82.4-96.2 million) for Nürburgring. HIG Capital declined to comment on the purchase. HIG looks to have outmaneuvered Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone, who had also submitted an offer for the circuit, which at 20km is the world’s longest race track but has not hosted a Grand Prix since Niki Lauda crashed there in 1976. The adjacent modern F1 track, which is 5.1km long, first hosted Formula One in 1984.
The assets include the track and adjacent amusement park which features a rollercoaster designed to mimic an F1 car. With Nürburgring, however, still to be sold off, Germany’s future in Formula One was less assured despite the heavyweight presence of Mercedes in the championship, Ecclestone told Reuters on Wednesday. Nürburgring currently alternates with Hockenheim as German Grand Prix host and Ecclestone said he was trying to do a deal with the latter circuit to take on the race every year.
“It depends who buys it,” he said when asked about the chances of Formula One returning to the Nürburgring, one of the sport’s historic tracks albeit heavily modified from the fearsome one used from the 1950s to 1970s. Completed in 1927, the original Ring was built to showcase German auto engineering and racing prowess, and the country’s deep-pocketed carmakers had been cited as potential bidders. An official for the helloistrator said that no decision on a buyer has yet been made.