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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Initial Public Offerings : An investigation of IPO's on the swedish market

Alm, Emelie, Berglund, Elin, Falk, Andreas January 2009 (has links)
When a firm decides to go public, two abnormalities often occur. The first is called underpricing and can be defined as a capital loss made by the company the first day of trade due to that the offer price is lower than the closing price after the first day of trade. The increase in stock value is equal to capital the issuing firm could have gained initially; this capital loss is referred to as the “money left on the table”. The second abnormality, underperformance, is a result from underpricing. It means that the stocks that were underpriced the first day also tend to underperform 3-5 years after the initial public offering (IPO) compared to competitors within the same industry. These two abnormalities together constitutes a problem for the firm because they loose money. However it also enables investors to make a quick profit. There are many studies covering this area, however mostly made by Americans, therefore the aim of this report is to investigate whether the two abnormalities exist on the Swedish market. In order to fulfill the purpose, companies that were listed 1998-2007 were investigated. Their stock performance is analyzed both on the day of IPO, where we found that 51% of the companies listed were underpriced, with an average of 23%. Further, the average “money left on the table” per company was 3.9 MSEK. The stock prices have also been analyzed on a one- as well as a five year period after the IPO in order to analyze the long-run performance and later compare it to the rest of the industry as well as industry index. We found that most of the companies that where underpriced also tend to follow underperformance. However, how long they underperform depends in which industry they operate. The IT industry, for example had a negative performance after 5 years whereas the Industrials industry has the turning-point from negative performance before 5 years.
2

Initial Public Offerings : An investigation of IPO's on the swedish market

Alm, Emelie, Berglund, Elin, Falk, Andreas January 2009 (has links)
<p>When a firm decides to go public, two abnormalities often occur. The first is called underpricing and can be defined as a capital loss made by the company the first day of trade due to that the offer price is lower than the closing price after the first day of trade. The increase in stock value is equal to capital the issuing firm could have gained initially; this capital loss is referred to as the “money left on the table”. The second abnormality, underperformance, is a result from underpricing. It means that the stocks that were underpriced the first day also tend to underperform 3-5 years after the initial public offering (IPO) compared to competitors within the same industry.</p><p>These two abnormalities together constitutes a problem for the firm because they loose money. However it also enables investors to make a quick profit. There are many studies covering this area, however mostly made by Americans, therefore the aim of this report is to investigate whether the two abnormalities exist on the Swedish market.</p><p>In order to fulfill the purpose, companies that were listed 1998-2007 were investigated. Their stock performance is analyzed both on the day of IPO, where we found that 51% of the companies listed were underpriced, with an average of 23%. Further, the average “money left on the table” per company was 3.9 MSEK. The stock prices have also been analyzed on a one- as well as a five year period after the IPO in order to analyze the long-run performance and later compare it to the rest of the industry as well as industry index. We found that most of the companies that where underpriced also tend to follow underperformance. However, how long they underperform depends in which industry they operate. The IT industry, for example had a negative performance after 5 years whereas the Industrials industry has the turning-point from negative performance before 5 years.</p>
3

Determinants of a Firm’s Return to the Market Post IPO Withdrawal

Yea, Nikki 01 January 2015 (has links)
This paper presents a seminal analysis of firms withdrawn from the IPO market (post security regulation filings) that return later for a subsequent IPO. This study contributes to the existing literature in four ways. First, by using IPO data from 1997 to 2012 in the Japanese market, the study extends the analysis on key determinants of a firm’s returning decision after an IPO withdrawal to the Japanese market. Secondly, it identifies VC ownership percentage and market run-up value 20 ~ 40 days prior to the withdrawn IPO as the key determinants of the probability a firm will return. Thirdly, using the duration model, the paper finds that an increase in VC ownership percentage and market run-up value 0 ~ 20 days prior to the withdrawn IPO allow the subsequent IPO to take place sooner. Finally, this paper attempts to find a correlation between macroeconomic indicators and the number of withdrawals at a given time. These findings can help find the factors that influence a firm’s decision in pursuing the public market option even after a failed attempt. However, censoring issues and the use of non-stationary variables remain as limitations to my findings.
4

Essays on Determinants of IPO Liquidity and Price Adjustments to Persistent Information in Option Markets

Lee, Yen-Sheng 16 May 2008 (has links)
I examine the determinants of cross-sectional liquidity in the IPO aftermarket during the period of 1995 through 2005. I find that past price performance, the extent of stock visibility, the mass of informed agents, and certain IPO attributes play a role in explaining IPO trading activity. My empirical evidence shows that differences of opinion and estimation uncertainty about an IPO firm affect little IPO liquidity. My findings contribute to the understanding of determinants of IPO aftermarket trading. I also investigate whether contemporaneous overreaction tends to occur following persistent information in the options market. More specifically, I compare the reactions between growth and value investors, and small and large investors conditional on past price reactions. My empirical results suggest that value investors react more strongly than growth investors following a series of prior information shocks, as measured by the cumulative level of overreaction. Small investors tend to react more strongly than large investors conditional on prior information shock, as measured by the cumulative sign or level of overreaction. The results imply that overreaction is a function of investor types and previous information and contribute to the overreaction hypothesis in the options market.
5

Analyzing Factors that Impact Company Age at Time of Initial Public Offering

Geary, Madison 01 January 2019 (has links)
The number of US domiciled initial public offerings (IPOs) has declined since its peak listing year in 1996. The US listing gap has grasped the attention of experts and researchers in the field but there is a lack of agreement among intellectuals regarding the underlying causes. The purpose of this paper is two-fold: 1) to identify and analyze the company characteristics and underlying factors that impact age at time of IPO that has resulted in the US listing gap and 2) to test if these characteristics and factors have fluctuated in impacting company age at IPO over time.
6

Peer Accounting Information and the Use of Peer-based Multiples for IPO Valuation

Brushwood, James Darrach January 2015 (has links)
Initial public offerings (IPOs) are primarily valued using the comparable firms approach, whereby underwriters rely heavily on multiples based on the accounting information of peer firms. Effective use of the comparable firms approach depends significantly on the underwriter's ability to estimate the expected future growth and profitability of the IPO firm and its peers and make appropriate adjustments to the multiples to arrive at a final offer price for the IPO shares. I find evidence that, in general, IPO valuations are decreasing relative to peers in the similarity of the peer group to the IPO firm, but this effect is moderated by the peer group's accruals quality. These findings suggest that when peers are similar to the IPO firm, underwriters make less adjustments to the final offer price, however, higher peer accruals quality may ease the assessment of differences in growth and profitability, facilitating further adjustments.
7

IPO ČSOB / IPO ČSOB

Ondová, Michaela January 2009 (has links)
The thesis aims to apply the theoretical approach of IPOs and financial services firm valuation on the Czech subsidiary of KBC: ČSOB. The theoretical part reviews the process of IPO with typical features of IPOs, and the pricing of IPO is discussed with the focus on theory of banks valuation. The empirical part of the thesis provides a financial analysis of the ČSOB, business plan and the valuation of the bank as of 30 September 2010 with the price of the actual IPO. This part aims at practical application of the theory of IPO and valuation. Al in all, the aim of the thesis is to apply theoretical knowledge of the IPOs on the practical case of ČSOB. Various analyses such as of KBC, ČSOB, Czech banking market, development of IPOs in CEE are used in order to apply and determine the reasons for the IPO, its timing, price and potential structure of investors.
8

Essays in Entrepreneurial Finance

Bernstein, Shai 19 December 2012 (has links)
In the first essay, I show that the transition to public equity markets have important implications to firms’ innovative process. To establish a causal effect of the IPO, I compare the long-run innovation of firms that completed their filing and went public with that of firms that withdrew their filing and remained private. I use NASDAQ fluctuations during the book-building period as a source of exogenous variation that affects IPO completion but is unlikely to affect long-run innovation. Using this approach, I find that the quality of internal innovation declines by 50 percent relative to firms that remained private. The decline in innovation is driven by both an exodus of skilled inventors and a decline in productivity among remaining inventors. However, going public allows firms to attract new human capital and purchase externally generated innovations through mergers and acquisitions. In the second essay, we explore the effects of private equity investments on the industries they invest at. This analysis looks across nations and industries to assess the impact of private equity on industry performance. Industries where PE funds have invested in the past five years have grown more quickly in terms of productivity and employment. It is hard to find support for claims that economic activity in industries with private equity backing is more exposed to aggregate shocks. The results using lagged private equity investments suggest that the results are not driven by reverse causality. Finally, in the third essay we model situations in which a principal offers a set of contracts to a group of agents to participate in a project. Agents’ benefits from participation depend on the identity of other participating agents. We show that when assuming multilateral externalities, the optimal contracts’ payoff relies on a ranking of the agents, which can be described as arising from a tournament among the agents. Rather than simply ranking agents according to a measure of popularity, the optimal contracting scheme makes use of a more refined two-way comparison between the agents. We derive results on the principal’s revenue extraction and the role of the level of externalities’ asymmetry. / Economics
9

Estudo de ofertas públicas de ações no Brasil e "underpricing" no período de 2003 a 2009

Ferraci, Ligia 11 August 2010 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-03-15T19:32:21Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Ligia Ferraci.pdf: 1333034 bytes, checksum: 7872150631d4eb40ece4b912f3149334 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010-08-11 / Fundo Mackenzie de Pesquisa / The capital market in Brazil has experienced, especially from the year 2003 to 2009,several changes and significant growth due to the global economic and financial environment as well as internal factors highlighting the regulatory improvements, development and credibility. As a result of this growth, we have observed a large number of companies that became public especially from 2006 on. The stock price behavior during this period has showed significant short-term positive returns, even when compared to Ibovespa index rates (Sao Paulo s Stock Exchange).Some potential explanations for such events may be the stock issue below the correct price (underpricing), informational asymmetry, the winner's curse (Rock ,1986) or other market anomalies discussed in the financial theory. This research focused the study in two possible factors: (1) issue below the correct price, known in financial literature for underpricing, and (2) the risk and return function as explanatory for stock returns in IPO issued from 1st, 30.th, 60.th, 90.th and 180.th days considering the sample of companies which registered initial public offerings (IPO) from 2003 until December 2009 listed on the Bovespa and the Securities Commission (CVM) and which had daily close available prices. The objective for this study was to verify the existence of underpricing in the IPO process and whether the observed abnormal returns can be explained by the risk and return function. As for the conclusion, in line with results of other recent researches for Brazilian stock market, were observed positive returns in the short term and negative returns for long term concluding that underpricing is a practice adopted in IPO s in Brazil as well as in other developed capital markets. / O mercado de capitais no Brasil experimentou,especialmente entre os anos de 2003 a 2009,muitas mudanças e crescimento acentuado em razão do ambiente econômico-financeiro mundial, bem como de fatores internos de ordem regulatória que propiciaram seu amadurecimento, desenvolvimento e credibilidade.Como consequência deste crescimento,observou-se um grande número de empresas que abriram seu capital mais acentuadamente a partir do ano de 2006.O retorno das ações durante esta periodo mostrou valores significativos a curto prazo, mesmo se comparados aos índices médios de mercado da Bolsa de Valores de São Paulo-Bovespa. Algumas explicações possíveis para tais eventos podem ser o lançamento abaixo do preço correto (underpricing), assimetria informacional, maldição do vencedor (winner s curse), anomalias de mercado, etc. Esta pesquisa centralizou o foco de estudo em dois possíveis fatores: (1) lançamento abaixo do preço correto, denominado na literatura financeira de underpricing, e (2) a relação entre risco e retorno como explicativa para retornos das ações lançadas em IPO a partir do 1.º, 30.º, 60.º, 90.º e 180.º dias da emissão considerando a amostra das empresas que registraram ofertas iniciais (IPO) a partir de 2003 até dezembro de 2009 listadas na Bovespa e na Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM) que possuíam cotações diárias de fechamento disponíveis.O objetivo do trabalho foi verificar a existência underpricing no processo de abertura de capital e se os retornos anormais verificados podem ser explicados pela relação risco e retorno.A título de conclusão e em consonância com resultados de outras pesquisas recentes para o mercado brasileiro, foram encontrados retornos positivos no curto prazo e negativos no longo prazo concluindo-se que o underpricing é uma prática adotada nos processos de IPO no Brasil assim como ocorre em outros mercados de capitais desenvolvidos.
10

How Initial Public Offerings Change Management Control System Packages

Sander, Christopher, Laidlaw, Clara January 2016 (has links)
This study aims to further develop research, from a management approach, by studying how MCS packages change when an organization undergoes an initial public offering. Furthermore, it aims to use Malmi and Brown’s (2008) management control system package in order to categorize and analyze the complexity of organizational change brought on by an initial public offering. This study draws on interviews with top managers in a high technological firm, which has recently been listed on the stock exchange. The results of this study imply that an initial public offering can change the MCS package in a number of different ways. Public companies do not necessarily become short-term, an initial public offering can affect a company’s external focus and measurements without affecting its internal measurements, in order for companies to become suitable for the stock market they formalize policies and appoint an independent board and listed companies can experience changes to their culture.

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