Lewis Hamilton — Ferrari Race-Worn, Miami 2025
Main reasons to invest
Return Potential📈: An investment of €500 could reach an estimated value of €1,011 in 5 years.
Cost-to-Return Ratio⚖️: With just 2.3% annual total costs (July / August releases with no exit fees), your net profit could be 15.1% per year in the balanced scenario and 46.2% in the ambitious scenario.
🏎️ Hamilton & Ferrari’s US Legacy: This suit marks the first US race of Lewis Hamilton’s historic Ferrari chapter—a union of two motorsport icons with massive American followings. As Hamilton nears the twilight of his career, its Miami provenance and rarity capture a fleeting moment where legend, legacy, and the US market converge.
Description
Metric | Value |
---|---|
Investment Horizon | 3–5 Years (2028–2030) |
Expected Net ROI (Balanced) | 15.1% p.a. after fees |
Optimistic Net ROI | 46.2% p.a. after fees |
Entry Discount | ~7.5% below recent auction averages (post fees) |
Sharpe Ratio | 0.62 (vs. SMI: 0.61) |
Value at Risk (VaR) | 90% chance to exceed €50,300 (5 yrs) |
Standard Deviation | 24.3% |
Risk Rating | B (7.2/10 – Moderate Risk) |
- 3–5 Year Window: Targets Hamilton’s Ferrari era momentum and growing institutional interest in top‑tier F1 memorabilia.
- 15.1% p.a. Balanced / 46.2% Upside: Anchored to like‑for‑like helmet and suit comps; rarity and star power create optionality.
- Validated Entry: €45,000 (+fees €50,250) vs. ~€54,300 comp average; Puma & OMP certification confirms originality.
- Risk Profile: 24.3% volatility benchmarked to Lewis Hamilton Index; VaR shows strong downside protection above cost basis.
- Catalysts: First Ferrari season provenance, limited supply of Hamilton‑Ferrari suits, expanding commercial footprint and fan base.
We will manage the exit strategy in collaboration with our expert on behalf of our investors, ensuring the best possible outcome based on market conditions at the time. Depending on the prevailing market situation, the memorabilia will be sold to a private collector or offered as a single lot at an auction. An auction is considered if the price has developed to the point where the minimum bid matches the market value and there is high demand for works by the artist. Both options are carefully considered, and we will choose the one that maximizes the return for our investors.
Formula 1 memorabilia investing benefits from the sport’s unprecedented global surge, fuelled by Netflix’s Drive to Survive and the upcoming F1 movie. Nowhere is this more evident than in the US, the world’s largest sports memorabilia market. Unlike football or basketball—with hundreds of matches—F1 has just over 20 races a year, each producing extremely limited race-worn items, making authentic pieces both scarcer and potentially more valuable over time.
In recent years, Formula 1’s popularity has exploded in the United States, driven by Netflix’s Drive to Survive and amplified by the release of the F1 movie now in cinemas. American audiences have embraced the drama, precision, and personalities of the sport, and Hamilton—charismatic, outspoken, and fiercely competitive—has become one of the most popular drivers stateside. Ferrari enjoys a similar cult status in the US, where the Prancing Horse is not only a racing legend but also a symbol of luxury, performance, and Italian excellence.
This particular asset—a race-worn and Puma-certified Lewis Hamilton Ferrari suit and a limited white underware shirt from the 2025 Miami Grand Prix—brings all of these threads together in a single, tangible piece of history. Miami, one of the crown jewels of the F1 calendar, represents the sport’s glamour and growing American footprint. With only around 20 races a year and strict limits on race-worn gear, genuine items like this are exceedingly rare. The significance is underscored by a record auction in which a 2007 Hamilton McLaren suit sold for $229,000, proving the strong appetite for his memorabilia. The combination of Hamilton’s historic Ferrari debut, the US market’s hunger for F1 collectibles, and the suit’s Miami provenance make it a trophy asset for serious collectors and investors alike.
Expert

Born in Bologna in 1980 and educated at UCLA, Matteo Macchiavelli is a former GT Championship driver turned acclaimed artist and fashion designer. Once Official F1 Artist in Austin, he now leverages unrivalled paddock connections—deep ties to Ferrari, F1 legends, and Ayrton Senna’s family—to source investment-grade F1 memorabilia.