Idan Ofer's family office holds $800M in sports assets, anchored by a 15% stake in Atletico Madrid and co-ownership of Vitesse Arnhem. Per Matchex data, the Ofer family represents a new wave of Israeli and Middle Eastern capital targeting undervalued European football clubs with restructuring potential. The $11B family office operates from Tel Aviv with deep roots in shipping, real estate, and finance—sectors that prize operational leverage and long-term value creation. Ofer's dual-club strategy mirrors patterns seen in private equity portfolios: control a flagship asset (Madrid) while incubating younger talent and commercial upside at secondary markets (Arnhem). This capital structure signals institutional family offices are bypassing traditional sports funds to build direct operating platforms. For Madrid, Ofer's minority position provides non-dilutive growth capital during LaLiga's revenue compression cycle. For institutional investors, the Ofer playbook demonstrates how non-endemic capital can generate 15–25% IRRs by combining sporting assets with balance sheet optimization and European media rights arbitrage.