http://uk.biz.yahoo.com/09092009/399/troubled-f1-awards-ecclestone-15-pay-rise.html wrote:
By Roger Blitz, Leisure Industries Correspondent
Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One motor racing chief, took a pay rise of nearly 15 per cent for his work on the sport's troubled series last year, taking his salary to £4m.
Mr Ecclestone's salary makes up the bulk of the £4.9m paid to directors of Formula One Management, one of the group of companies controlled by CVC Capital, the private equity group and F1's commercial rights holder.
CVC's losses from F1 stretched beyond $500m (£302m) after F1's deal with its cash-strapped teams to increase prize pay-outs in order to ensure they stayed in the troubled series.
Delta 3, the group of companies that run F1, saw pre-tax losses rise from $412m in 2007 to $539m last year. Losses attributable to CVC, which bought F1 in 2006 with $2.5bn in loans, were $505m. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation fell $104m to $341m, after the rights holders forked out $179m in prize money, taking the overall prize fund up 52 per cent to $521m.
The prize-fund increase came after Honda announced in December it was quitting the sport because of the pressures of financing its team, sending F1 into financial crisis.
The remaining teams have signed an agreement with CVC and Mr Ecclestone to stay in F1 until 2012. Prize money will rise depending on increases in the commercial rights holder's future profits.
Delta 3's turnover rose $120m to $1.1bn after Singapore and Valencia were added to the F1 calendar, and an increase in TV and race rights' income.
But the US Grand Prix was scrapped and Delta 3 wrote off $22m due from the Canadian Grand Prix after its contract was terminated.
CVC's net finance charges rose $6m to $624m. The charges include a payment-in-kind interest expense of $574m. CVC last year repaid $84m of its loans, leaving $2.3bn to be repaid by 2014