Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac remain on the hunt for fresh Wrexham investment.
Since becoming owners in 2021, Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac have helped Wrexham grow a great deal on and off the pitch.
In early 2025, the Red Dragons were given a valuation of £100m, which is £98m more than what Rob and Ryan paid four and a half years ago.
Over the summer, meanwhile, it was reported that Reynolds and Mac want to sell a stake in Wrexham at a £350m valuation.

Billionaires have contacted Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac
Several months later, fresh investment has yet to be confirmed. But it does not look as though the North American duo will be short of options.
Before reports of a stake sale emerged in June, club chief Humphrey Ker discussed Wrexham’s rise to the Championship in May.
When doing so, he shared that dozens of billionaires have already contacted Rob and Ryan about joining the project.
He said: “I think it’s very possible [reaching the Premier League], but I think that if you know we build our training ground, and we build our stand and we renovate the stadium and we get ourselves up to like we’ve got a 20,000-seat modernish stadium that retains the charm, and we can make that jump.
“Then I think what happens is that Rob and Ryan go into their Rolodex and call up one of the dozens and dozens of people who’ve got in touch within the last four years and been like ‘hi I’m a multi, multi, multi billionaire, I want to join in on this with you’.
“They would stay on, remain in their roles, but we would have someone who could help because basically getting out of the Championship to the Premier League, you’re just lighting money.”
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Wrexham revenue in Championship
Ker’s comments on Wrexham needing more investment now that they are in the second tier do make sense.
They are competing with plenty of top teams who are receiving parachute payments from the Premier League.
However, the high-profile nature of their owners and the success of Welcome to Wrexham on an international basis means the club are still doing well financially without another investor.
Wrexham expect to make £50m in revenue during their first Championship season, which is a similar number to Birmingham City.
