Creative Artists Agency closed its acquisition of ICM Partners for $750 million, folding a 53-year-old agency into the largest talent representation firm in Hollywood. The transaction removes one of CAA's five major competitors and hands it 700 ICM agents, including the literary division that represented authors like Colleen Hoover and the film unit that handled directors including Spike Lee.
ICM Partners employed roughly 700 agents across offices in Los Angeles, New York, London, and Washington. CAA now controls ICM's publishing arm, which generated an estimated $42 million in annual commissions from book deals, and its independent film group, which brokered financing on projects that won 11 Academy Awards over the past decade. ICM's corporate consulting practice, which advised companies on culture and crisis management, also transfers. CAA will absorb most agents but has not disclosed redundancy figures. Layoffs typically follow within 90 days of close.
The deal matters because it shrinks the number of agencies capable of packaging a studio tentpole or syndicating a bestseller. CAA, WME, UTA, and Paradigm now hold 89% of A-list talent by one trade estimate. Consolidation raises commission leverage: when fewer agencies control the same pool of clients, studios and publishers face less pricing competition. CAA can now bundle ICM's literary clients with its own film and television rosters, a tactic that generated controversy in 2019 when the Writers Guild accused agencies of conflicts of interest tied to packaging fees. That dispute ended with new rules capping certain fees, but the incentive to cross-sell remains.
The acquisition also positions CAA in New York publishing. ICM's book division operated from a Midtown office and maintained relationships with all five major publishers. CAA previously lacked depth in literary representation, focusing instead on film, television, music, and sports. The combined firm now competes directly with WME, which bought the literary agency Endeavor Content's book arm in 2021, and UTA, which has grown its publishing group through individual agent hires. Expect CAA to pitch existing film clients on book extensions and existing authors on screen adaptations.
ICM's owner, a group that included management and the private equity firm Crestview Partners, had explored a sale since 2022. The firm lost talent to rivals during the process, including agents who left for UTA and WME. The $750 million price reflects both ICM's commission base and the cost of stemming further defections. CAA is owned by TPG Capital, which acquired a majority stake in 2010 and has since sold down to roughly 35%. TPG's exit strategy depends on CAA's valuation, and consolidation supports a higher multiple when the firm eventually seeks liquidity.
Watch for client announcements in the next 60 days. Agents at acquired firms typically send letters disclosing the change of control and offering clients the chance to leave without penalty. High-profile exits signal dissatisfaction and create poaching opportunities for remaining independents like Gersh and APA. Also watch CAA's packaging activity in publishing. If the agency begins bundling book-to-screen deals that tie literary commissions to production fees, expect pushback from the Authors Guild, which has stayed quieter than the Writers Guild but monitors similar conflicts. Finally, observe whether WME or UTA pursue acquisitions of smaller agencies to maintain competitive scale. ICM was the last major independent; what remains are firms with 150 agents or fewer.
The deal closed in late May 2025, weeks after CAA hired 12 new sports agents from Wasserman and Excel, a separate expansion that cost roughly $18 million in signing bonuses according to one person familiar. The sports hires and the ICM purchase together represent CAA's largest six-month outlay since 2016, when it bought the Chinese marketing firm Hejin Capital.
The takeaway
CAA spent **$750 million** to remove a competitor and gain **700** agents, tightening commission leverage across film and books.
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