Essays on Initial Public Offerings

Essays on Initial Public Offerings

Author: Hugh Monte Joseph Colaco

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 109

ISBN-13: 9781109878288

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In the second essay, it is argued that the time following an amendment in which demand is revealed has a cost. So, why do some firms take longer than others to go public following the amendment? It is hypothesized that the delay to the offer results from overestimation of demand and risk. As a result, underpricing predicted at the amendment is not indicative of the final level of underpricing. The firm and its investors bear the costs of the delay. This study highlights the distinction between partial and full information and the costs associated with SEC requirements.


Three Essays on the Information Content of Stock Options

Three Essays on the Information Content of Stock Options

Author: Zekun Wu

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation consists of three essays that explore the information content embedded in equity options. The results improve our understanding of the cross-section of option returns, informed trading in the options market, and the industry effect of IPOs. In the first essay, we study the relation between option-implied skewness (IS) and the crosssection of option returns under daily hedging to better understand skewness pricing in isolation from lower moments. Creating portfolios of delta-hedged (D-hedged) and delta-vega-hedged (DV-hedged) options with daily rebalancing, we find that IS is negatively (positively) related to call (put) option returns, but the relation to put options is statistically significant only during economic recessions. The relation is more substantial when the underlying stock has a larger market beta and when the firm has more severe information opacity. Our results suggest that investors' skewness preference grows stronger with greater market risk and lower information quality. In the second essay, we examined the informed trading in the options market before FDA drug advisory committee meetings. We find significant abnormal options trading volume before both meeting dates and report creation dates, particularly for small drug firms. Abnormal volume significantly predicts post-meeting stock returns. Informed traders prefer out-of-the-money options and choose maturities to cover the dates when reports are publicly released. They prefer to sell options close to the meeting date, perhaps to capture returns from both expected stock price changes and the sharp drop in implied volatility post-meeting. In the third essay, I investigate the effect of initial public offerings (IPOs) on industry competitors' options market. I find that rival firms' put (call) options volume increases (decreases) around IPOs, leading to price pressure on call options relative to put options as measured by the implied volatility spread. Rival firms' reaction in the options market also predicts the IPO firms' post-IPO stock performance. Lastly, rival firms with strong operating income experience less negative impact in the options market, suggesting competitive operation performance help stabilize rival firms' options market around IPOs.


Initial Public Offerings: Findings and Theories

Initial Public Offerings: Findings and Theories

Author: Seth Anderson

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 126

ISBN-13: 1461522951

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Initial public offerings (IPOs) play a crucial role in allocating resources in market economies. Because of the enormous importance of IPOs, an understanding of how IPOs work is fundamental to an understanding of financial markets generally. Of particular interest is the puzzling existence of high initial returns to equity IPOs in the United States and other free-market economies. Audience: Designed for use by anyone wishing to perform further academic research in the area of IPOs and by those practitioners interested in IPOs as investment vehicles.


Initial Public Offerings and Real Estate Investment Trusts

Initial Public Offerings and Real Estate Investment Trusts

Author: Sandra F. Holsonback

Publisher:

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13:

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Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) are financial vehicles whereby firms can raise capital through public markets. These vehicles increased in importance in the 1990's when financial institutions were reluctant to lend money, especially to young or unestablished firms. Private real estate companies, hampered by these tight credit markets, formed Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), a public entity. REIT IPOs trade on the same markets and are subject to the same SEC regulations as equity stocks, but the lack luster behavior of their initial stock offerings is opposite to large initial day returns exhibited by equity stocks. In proposing that underpricing is a strategy utilized by the firm and the underwriter, this study, comparing IPOs of four industries: retail, manufacturer of communication equipment, software development, and REITs, validates the theory of asymmetric information, whereby investors are compensated for risk through underpricing.


Two Essays in Financial Economics

Two Essays in Financial Economics

Author: Kevin T. Green

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation consists of two essays in financial economics. The first essay, included in Chapter 2, concerns abnormal stock returns around IPO lockup expiration events. IPO lockup agreements prevent existing shareholders from selling shares for a period of time, usually 180 days, following the initial public offering. Historically stocks exhibit negative returns on the date in which the lockup agreement expires, and thereby allows a previously restricted shareholder group to actively participate in the market. The effect is concentrated in companies backed by venture capital funding prior to going public. Given that the timing and details of the lockup agreement are publicly available, such a pattern should not exist in an efficient market. In this essay I examine the long term return pattern around IPO lockup expirations to determine whether there is evidence of market inefficiency or if market constraints limit arbitrage opportunities. Using a dataset of IPO activity from 1988-2014, I find abnormal returns are highly persistent over the sample period despite a decline in bid-ask spreads and an increase in IPO lockup publicity. This finding is contrary to earlier studies that suggest trading costs and a potentially uninformed market contributed to the abnormal return pattern. I also find suggestive evidence that the effect is not driven by short sale constraints that prohibit arbitrage traders’ ability to trade in the market. Finally, I simulate a trading strategy that allows me to implement liquidity controls and portfolio risk management constraints. I find excess returns endure but are limited in scale due to low market liquidity. This result shows the abnormal return pattern is sensitive to the size of capital investment, which serves as a deterrent to market participants and plays a significant role in the anomaly’s persistence. The second essay, included in Chapter 3, examines the indirect impact of changes in supplier credit ratings on customer procurement decisions. This essay is co-authored with Xuan Tian and Han Xia. Existing research concludes credit ratings convey important information on firms’ credit worthiness. As a result, customers may rely on credit ratings to evaluate supply chain risks. We analyze whether customers modify purchasing behavior as a risk mitigation tool following changes in their suppliers’ credit ratings. Our identification strategy incorporates a quasi-natural experiment around Moody’s 1982 ratings refinement, and allows us to alleviate the potentially endogenous effect of changes to firm financial health that often accompany changes in credit ratings. We find public sector customers respond strongly to supplier rating changes: they increase purchases from upgraded firms, and reduce purchases from downgraded firms. This response, however, is not observed for private sector customers. We show this contrast is likely due to government agents’ desire to respond to ratings, a prevalent and verifiable certification, to signal that their decision-making is aligned with external assessment and to avoid reputational losses. We also find suggestive evidence that powerful politicians use ratings to award government contracts to suppliers located in states they represent.