The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off June 11 in North America – the “largest edition” in tournament history, with 48 teams, 104 matches, and 16 host cities spread across the US, Mexico, and Canada.
The economic footprint is enormous, and for equity investors, the question isn’t whether money will be made – it’s who captures the most of it.
According to experts, three names rise clearly above the noise: Fox, Anheuser-Busch InBev, and Marriott International.
Fox Corporation (FOXA): the advertising windfall
Fox’s position going into the 2026 FIFA World Cup is exceptionally strong – and the “backstory” makes it even richer.
The company reportedly paid less than $500 million for the broadcast rights, but analysts believe this number is two to three times what FOXA is actually paying, after FIFA locked in the deal as compensation for moving the 2022 Qatar tournament out of its planned summer window.
So it’s effectively a lopsided arrangement that overwhelmingly favors Fox stock.
The 2026 World Cup is projected to generate about $850 million in combined advertising revenue for Fox Sports and Telemundo – more than double the $384.3 million generated the last time the tournament was played in a summer window.
In fact, Daniel Cohen – head of Octagon’s sports media rights advisory team – estimates Fox will turn a profit on World Cup ad revenue alone – before accounting for subscriptions, streaming, or long-term brand value.
Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD): exclusive pour rights
AB InBev shares stand to meaningfully benefit from the 2026 FIFA World Cup because the company has a contractual lock on the tournament’s most consumed product.
It holds exclusive beer rights inside stadiums as FIFA’s official global partner – a major advantage that applies across all 16 host cities, regardless of local competition.
History suggests the uplift is real and measurable: during the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, AB InBev sold an additional 140 million liters, and even at the heavily restricted Qatar 2022 tournament, the company achieved a 9.9% increase in volume during matches.
Management has guided for EBITDA growth of up to 8% for the full year, treating the World Cup as a meaningful catalyst rather than a wildcard.
With stadium exclusivity, a growing premium portfolio, and proven tournament data behind it, BUD looks like a direct beneficiary of the FIFA World Cup.
Marriott International (MAR): rooms, rates, and a revenue play
Marriott sees the 2026 FIFA World Cup contributing 30-35 basis points to global RevPAR growth this year, with management expressing confidence based on detailed historical benchmarking and ongoing booking pace.
That confidence carried into broader guidance: Marriott raised its full-year global RevPAR outlook after delivering a “Q1 beat” – with North America RevPAR up 4% year-over-year and momentum broadening across luxury, group, and select-service segments.
Marriott Bonvoy is also an official tournament partner, positioning it to capture fan travel through curated hospitality packages and exclusive access offers.
In short, MAR’s scale, host-city concentration, and management conviction make it the hospitality play most likely to deliver when tournament traffic arrives.
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