Three days inside the Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix. A yacht in the harbour. A trackside venue Monaco doesn't list.
"We do not merely host events;
we engineer the environments
where global legacies are secured."
Capital moves on trust.
Trust is a function of time spent in the same air.
For three days each June, that air is in Monaco.
The opening day at a private venue meters from the circuit. Real estate, infrastructure and longevity — the three forces moving the next decade of capital allocation.
A superyacht moored inside the harbour — not offshore. Infrastructure, AI and the future industries composing the next cycle, with the circuit live in front of you.
The same private venue, doors reopened. Culture, art, philanthropy and digital assets — closing with a runway and a sunset before Sunday’s grid.
The themes the room comes to discuss. Panels woven into the days — not staged against them. Specific sessions and speakers are confirmed to guests by name.
The programme is composed in dialogue with each edition's room. Themes are kept current; speakers are kept quiet.
Not a uniform of suits. Every guest a principal in their world.
The panels are real — sent to confirmed guests. What earns this weekend its weight is everything around them.
People come for the access. They return for what happens between the sessions.
The apex private concierge for the principals of this era. The house that closes the unbuyable: the yacht that wasn't for sale, the table that wasn't open, the address that doesn't appear on any calendar.
Racing Capital is what happens when that house convenes its constituency for three days a year.
Pricing is for the full Monaco edition — all three days, both venues, the yacht included. Title is allocated to a single house per edition. All other tiers are filled on a first-spoken basis.
Allocations across all tiers — and the guest list itself — are made by direct conversation. We respond within 24 hours to every credible enquiry.
Lakhi will be in touch within 24 hours.