I'm quoting RonDennis' post but generally replying to the thread...
Mclaren have changed ownership a lot recently, with Ron Dennis and Mercedes exiting and with Latifi coming on board. Having different investors won't change that. It's a shame we can't have Toto taking up the option.
There's plenty of money to be made from Mclaren F1 in the future, they can well afford to exist successfuly in the budget cap. Mclaren F1s current income stood at £185.7m in FYE 2019, up £50m on FYE 2018.
https://investors.mclaren.com/sites/mcl ... c-2019.pdf
This year is a blip and whilst it might be harder to find some sponsors, the existing contracts should hold and the impression you get is that this years sponsor revenue will be up again, as will the rewards payments from 2019 racing results. So not all doom and gloom.
Mclaren redundancies were happening anyway and more will come due to the budget cap. This report is not a question of Mclaren being viable, it is a question of how to fund Mclaren through this situation at the lowest possible cost to the team, the shareholders and the bondholders. There would be a queue of investors from the Middle East and China all willing to invest in Mclaren. What we are in fact seeing, is politics.
The owners don't feel they want to or can afford to support the team but nor do they want to relinquish it. Bondholders and banks are having a different opinion. In fact, it may be that those institutions are doing to the owners what Ron Dennis tried to do and and institute new ownership, with the current owners are possibly trying to prevent that by managing a controlled sale themselves. If the owners can no longer support the team and they can't find fresh investment then they will have no choice but to let go.
That's just my opinion on it all. Now watch them go bankrupt next year and get renamed to Racing Lada as some Russian investors pick up the pieces.