UTA chief executive David Kramer is evaluating an acquisition of IMG Worldwide that would price north of $4 billion and reshape the sports representation landscape before summer. The target is Endeavor's IMG division, which operates athlete management, event ownership, licensing platforms, and college multimedia rights across 30 countries. No term sheet has surfaced, but three people familiar with the deliberations say Kramer's team has engaged advisors and begun modeling integration scenarios that would double UTA's sports footprint overnight.
IMG carries roughly 800 athlete clients, including tennis players Naomi Osaka and Coco Gauff, plus NFL quarterback Trevor Lawrence. The unit also controls the Miami Open, manages naming rights for arenas in 14 markets, and operates the college sports marketing arm that holds multimedia contracts with 200 universities. Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel has spent two years restructuring after taking the parent public via SPAC in 2021, and has already sold off non-core event properties to generate cash. IMG's EBITDA sits around $320 million on revenue near $1.4 billion, per two people who have reviewed recent financials. That puts the mooted $4 billion figure at roughly 12.5x trailing EBITDA, a premium to CAA's 10x multiple in its 2022 Pinault family sale but below the 15x range that WME commanded in its own 2014 IMG acquisition.
For UTA, the move is existential arithmetic. The agency entered sports seriously in 2019 by acquiring Klutch Sports Group, adding LeBron James and 60 NBA clients, but has remained subscale against WME Sports and CAA Sports. Kramer, who became CEO in 2022 after 12 years as president, has told board members that talent representation alone no longer funds the overhead required to compete for endorsement mandates from Nike, Gatorade, and Visa. IMG's licensing infrastructure and event ownership would let UTA sell packages that bundle athlete talent, venue activation, and broadcast windows—the model that WME has used to win $180 million in new sponsor commitments since 2021. One person close to Kramer says the math only works if UTA can cross-sell its Hollywood client base into IMG's sports properties, turning the Miami Open into a celebrity showcase and routing IMG's NFL clients into film and podcast deals UTA controls.
The financing structure remains unclear. UTA is privately held, backed by PSP Investments and Investcorp, and would likely need to bring in additional capital partners or structure seller financing with Endeavor to close a deal this size. Endeavor's own balance sheet shows $5.8 billion in debt as of Q4 2024, and selling IMG would help Emanuel pay down leverage while keeping WME Sports and the UFC, the two units he has said are core to the portfolio. One banker who works with talent agencies says the $4 billion price tag assumes IMG's college division alone is worth $800 million to $1 billion as a standalone asset, based on recent renewals at Ohio State ($252 million over 11 years) and Texas ($200 million over 10 years). If those contracts keep inflating with conference realignment and playoff expansion, a buyer who waits six months could face a higher entry price.
The deal would force CAA, Wasserman, and Excel Sports to accelerate their own M&A agendas. CAA has raised a $1 billion investment fund targeting sports properties but has yet to deploy it at scale. Excel has quietly added 40 NFL clients in the past 18 months and would need to either buy into licensing platforms or risk losing endorsement pitches to a UTA-IMG combination that can offer one-stop deal flow. One sponsorship consultant who works with three Fortune 500 brands says the real shift happens when a single agency controls both the athlete and the event venue: "You go from pitching a logo patch to designing a three-day festival where the athlete performs, the brand activates, and the agency collects fees at every layer."
Kramer has until mid-2025 to decide, per one person tracking the process. Endeavor's debt covenants require asset sale proceeds to be applied to principal reduction by Q3, which sets an informal deadline for any IMG buyer to move. Meanwhile, WME Sports just renewed its CAA Football poaching campaign, adding 12 draft prospects in January alone, and has told clients it plans to spend $50 million this year on marketing and analytics infrastructure. If UTA closes the IMG deal, expect coordinator hires from CAA and Wasserman by September, when college football media rights negotiations enter their next cycle and every agency will need to explain why their licensing division can compete with a newly enlarged UTA platform.
The play is clean: Kramer either writes the check and becomes the industry's third superpower, or UTA accepts permanent third-tier status while CAA and WME split the endorsement economy. No other buyer has surfaced with the talent roster to make IMG's cross-sell model work, which means Endeavor's price likely holds until someone calls.