Jolle wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 16:21
politburo wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 16:13
Jolle wrote: ↑01 Sep 2021, 15:56
Let’s say… redbull. There is a parent company, RedBull AG that owns four companies. RedBull racing, RedBull Tecnologies, Alpha Tauri Racing and RedBull power plant.
Parts of RedBull Racing and Tecnologies plus some staff members of RedBull fall under the cap for RedBull, and the same for Alpha Tauri. How the income or the cash flow goes in real life between all those companies in unimportant.
The reporting group is only the F1 team and its entities. Thus, RedBull Powertrains can make/develop engines, but if say RedBull Racing (the F1 team) are creative, they can separate the F1 team from all other RedBull entities, and simply include under their costs the costs of procuring the engines alone, whilst the costs of development are eaten by their engine supplier RedBull Powertrains. Thus the F1 team will be saving on engine R&D costs because these engine R&D entities are not part of their "reporting group".
It’s not quite that simple. PU’s must be supplied for reasonable costs or a subtraction from the cost cap (real money doesn’t have to exchange hands/companies but the services or parts are assigned a value). It’s also not as cut clear as just having the whole racing team within the cap. Some parts will, other activities won’t or some will be assigned a different value then the actually cost. Loopholes like “just make a new company and sell a F1 car for a tenner” doesn’t work.
Perhaps you are right. But that last part is clearly not what I said, I never said it is a loophole but it's there in the regulations though, there are several clauses and definitions that may separate the F1 team and its costs from those of the controlling party of the F1 team and perhaps other legal entities within the same legal group. In the Appendix, they do define what reporting group is, and they also define what the legal group is. The cost cap covers the costs of the reporting group, not the entire controlling group (legal group).
This is why, even if Mercedes HPP was designated to be sufficiently outside the reporting group and produces powertrains for Mercedes F1 Team, the costs required for research and development (which are easily the largest areas of spending for teams) need not be accorded to Mercedes F1 Team if Mercedes HPP is an independent reporting entity outside the reporting group of the F1 team, but they still need to add the cost of procuring those components related to the power unit.
It'll be like Mercedes supplying power units to Williams in that case and that would be a huge adjustment if indeed that is correct, I am happy to admit that it may not be.