Who Wants to Own a Piece of Wasserman?

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It’s been over two months since Casey Wasserman made the surprise move under pressure to put his namesake company up for auction after facing an artist exodus when his decades-old emails with Ghislaine Maxwell surfaced in the Department of Justice’s Jeffrey Epstein documents.

Since that time, potential suitors have been gaming out a few questions, namely: Is this a fire sale? Is Wasserman willing to break up his sprawling firm into pieces? Is there an appetite to buy the company whole — or just pick off clients in each division? And is Wasserman serious about a sale or is this the equivalent of a homeowner putting a beloved property on the market at way too high of a listing price in the hopes of chasing off all but the highest bidders?

On Monday, the first round of bids were submitted to investment bank Moelis & Co, which is

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