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Crypto's hold on Formula 1 sponsoring gets tested in Singapore

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 6 min read
Crypto's hold on Formula 1 sponsoring gets tested in Singapore
Singapore hosted the F1 race from Sept 29 to Oct 2. Photo: Bloomberg
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At Formula One’s Miami Grand Prix in May, the dizzying displays of crypto companies sponsoring the sport were inescapable, with Crypto.com’s blue branding covering every imaginable surface along the race track.

When Singapore hosts the most popular motorsport this weekend, the visibility of digital assets will be far more subdued. The Monetary Authority of Singapore will let teams show their crypto sponsors’ logos only on cars and uniforms at the Singapore Grand Prix, but no advertising will be permitted around the track or in the local area.

The shift underscores the changing mood around crypto, both from a regulatory and a financial standpoint. Jurisdictions in Singapore, the UK and France have intensified scrutiny this year after digital asset prices soured, billion-dollar projects collapsed and major market players went bankrupt. As a result, F1’s newest throng of advertisers are finding ways to make their mark without moving too boldly.

The rout in cryptocurrencies in recent months, which has wiped out around US$2 trillion ($2.87 trillion) in value since November, has left crypto brands more cash-strapped but still keen to maintain what they’ve already invested to keep a foothold on the world stage.

Jeremy Walls, a senior executive for the Miami venue who helped close the deal with Crypto.com, said that current market dynamics may make crypto companies “be a little more thorough and thoughtful” about the deals they sign going forward.

“I’m still seeing people doing crypto partnerships now, it’s just maybe not the pace that it once was,” Walls said.

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Partnering with an F1 team has turned into a status symbol for crypto companies, a flashy multi-million-dollar accessory that signals affluence and success at a time when market prices reflect the opposite. Around 80% of F1 teams have at least one crypto partner, in addition to Formula One Group itself, which has its own US$100 million deal with Crypto.com.

Zak Brown, head of McLaren Racing, said that F1 teams “don’t want to get left behind” when a new sponsor or trend emerges. McLaren signed a five-year deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars with crypto exchange OKX in May and will debut a special crypto-themed car for the circuits in Singapore and Japan in compliance with the stricter advertising guidance.

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Rob Bloom, chief marketing officer at Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings Plc’s F1 team, said the need to alter sponsor branding to suit different locations is par for the course in the sport. Certain locations require bans on alcohol or tobacco marketing, for example, where companies like Philip Morris International Inc. historically showed the shape or coloured branding of their cigarettes without actually displaying a logo.

Aside from emblazoned logos across drivers’ uniforms and cars, F1 teams are also getting into crypto themselves. Several now offer fan tokens —- team-specific cryptoassets that can be earned, traded and used to pay for experiences or rewards -— and nonfungible tokens assigned to individual car parts.


Crypto brands are taking the wheel in F1 racing.

NFTs have become increasingly popular in sports marketing, boosting global fan engagement by teaming up with artists like @Mad_Dog_Jones pic.twitter.com/IdH0kprryG

What makes F1 a promising proposition for sponsors is the sport’s global and loyal audience. Next year’s competition is expected to reach a record of 24 races in 21 countries, held over the course of nine months. Fans are also typically wealthier thanks to the sport’s high cost of entry, where tickets start at hundreds of dollars and TV channels pay high fees for exclusive broadcasting rights.

Whether crypto firms will be able to keep up the pace of dealmaking in sports remains unclear, with waning demand for digital assets now taking its toll. Crypto.com and Bybit were among several major companies to lay off staff earlier this year, while the likes of FTX opt to value their F1 partnerships on an annual basis, according to Avi Dabir, the exchange’s vice president for business development.

Since signing with Mercedes, Dabir said FTX had seen a “noticeable” increase in new customers, as well as more interest from existing clients who want to take advantage of access to F1 races.

F1 is no stranger to volatility. McLaren driver Daniel Ricciardo, currently signed as a brand ambassador for OKX, is expected to leave his team at the end of this season, his third switch in five years. Brown said next year’s marketing imagery with the exchange may have to transition to feature a new driver as a result, or focus more closely on the car itself.

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McLaren also had a previous crypto partner in Turkish exchange Bitci.com, which at the time was the first to run a fan token for an F1 team. The deal was quietly wound up in February after less than a year, Bloomberg reported at the time, along with two other Bitci.com deals with European football clubs after it failed to make payments to certain partners.

“That was one that we jumped into pretty quickly,” Brown said in an interview. “You need to do your homework to understand” a crypto deal. As a result, the subsequent partnership with OKX was scrutinized by a 15-person external advisory board, he said.

Due diligence has become even more important this year amid a spate of major crypto collapses, in addition to rising regulation. McLaren is now exploring a new fan token with OKX, which it hopes to launch in 2023 after taking its time to ensure “really robust” development, the team’s director of licensing, e-commerce, e-sports and gaming, Lindsey Eckhouse said.

Despite racing team sponsorships typically being more expensive than other sports, Crypto.com Chief Marketing Officer Steven Kalifowitz said its F1 deals were among the first that the exchange made.

“I was really looking for ways to meet a global audience and meet them quickly,” Kalifowitz said. F1 really delivers on that in a way I don’t think really any other sport does.”

But with crypto stuck hovering around yearly lows and the general economic environment signalling a potential turn for the worse, the future of F1’s multi-year deals hang in the balance. It’s typical in the sport for partners to come and go, if a sponsor suddenly can’t meet the millions of dollars required to stay in the race, said Ted Dobrzynski, president of F1 sponsorship agency VIAGP.

“They’re going to have to regroup and the market will balance itself next season,” he said, predicting that at least two crypto brands could scrap their deals due to market instability. “When the cars are presented to the world in February next year, you’ll see who disappeared.”

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