Initial Return and Long-Run Performance of Initial Public Offerings in the Nairobi Stock Exchange


Book Description

Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) marks an important turning point in the life of a company. To the company as an entity, it provides access to public equity capital and so may lower the cost of funding the company's operations and investments. To the public, it provides an opportunity for investment in a liquid market. The objective of this study is to investigate the long-run performance of initial public offerings in Kenya for the period from 2002 to 2008. Data used in this study comes from Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE) weekly share price.In addition, the study uses a theory on IPO introduced by Ritter (1991) which specifically deals with long-run performance of IPOs and why some IPO companies have substantial positive returns and others have substantial negative long-run buy-and-hold abnormal returns. To evaluate the short-run and long-run performance, this study approaches the problem by differentiating the abnormal return patterns using financial economic methodologies. The empirical findings suggest that the subsequent trading activities in the stock market are the most important factor for determining the future performance of an IPO. These activities are extensively engineered by some of the influential investors with big stake in the stock market. Thus, it is very hard to analyze the fundamental value of this stock market.Future researchers should concentrate on statistical analysis of the dependency of several independent variables. With an attempt to investigate whether the percentage of share sold, the uncertainty about the future value of the firm, the market index fluctuation, the size of firm, the political stability and the value of issue on the first day of trading significantly influence the initial returns.and the long-run performance of IPOs.The results from this study suggest that firms with a superior performance have the opportunity to appreciate in value and can raise additional capital whereas the poor performers do not get a second chance to sell shares to the public. This means that companies have to earn at least their cost of capital in order to receive confidence from the investors. Compared to other research, this study gives a theoretical and empirical background on the performance and the significant difference in short-run and long-run performance of IPOs. This finding offers new insights to both Academics and practitioners alike.




Under-Pricing and Long-Run Performance of Initial Public Offerings in Developing Markets


Book Description

The transition from being a private company to a public one is one of the most important events in the life of a firm. It is also one of particular interest to institutional investors, and the transition is facilitated through the initial public offering (IPO) process. The IPO provides a fresh source of capital that is critical to the growth of the firm and provides the founder and other shareholders such as venture capitalists a liquid market for their shares. From an institutional investor's perspective, the IPO provides an opportunity to share in the rewards of the growth of the firm. The purpose of this paper is to examine the long-run performance of IPOs in developing markets using various methods to ascertain the significance of the over or under-performance of IPOs. Among the many reasons for the performance which we see, one of them could be the sensitivity of the results to the choice of benchmarks. Dimson and Marsh, Ritter, Gregory et al., Fama and French and Fama have successively demonstrated the sensitivity of the long-run performance of the IPOs the benchmark used in the study. For this reason, I am also motivated to study the effect of various benchmarks on the return measurements so as to elucidate the possibility that the magnitude of the performance is benchmark dependent. Finally, the focus of this study will be the Chinese and Indian markets.




The Long-run Operating Performance of Initial Public Offerings


Book Description

The after-market and long-run price behavior of initial public offerings (IPOs) has generated considerable research interest. Previous studies have generally found that IPOs are underpriced at issue, but typically underperform benchmark portfolios in the long-run. Relatively less attention has been paid to why IPOs underperform benchmark portfolios in the long-run, particularly in IPO markets that are smaller than the US IPO market and where the institutional environment differs as well. In this paper, we provide the first comprehensive empirical analysis of the long-run operating performance of IPOs in Australia during 1991 94, and attempt to relate the level of underpricing to their pre- and post-issue operating performance and the long-run price behavior.




INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS - 2ND EDITION


Book Description

A fully revised and updated second edition of the essential guide that tells you everything you want to know about IPOs in the UK. An initial public offering (IPO) - the occasion when a firm's shares are issued to the public for the first time - is one of the most exciting events in the life of a company, providing new opportunities for the business, its managers and for investors. IPOs attract a lot of attention from stock market researchers, academics and investors seeking to understand more about how they work and how the shares of IPO companies perform once they are listed. In this second edition of Initial Public Offerings, Arif Khurshed delves into the history of IPOs on the London Stock Exchange, explains the mechanics of how IPOs are arranged and how they are priced, and provides an analysis - with detailed but lucid reference to past academic studies - of how the shares of IPO companies perform in the short and long term. The book provides valuable insight into many fundamental IPO matters, including: - the different methods of flotation that are used, - the alternative ways in which IPO shares are priced, - how common it is for IPO shares to over or underperform, - the survival of IPO firms once they are listed. There are also detailed case studies of the short- and long-run performance of a number of high-profile IPOs, including those of Facebook, Alibaba and Royal Mail. If you are an academic, finance professional or serious investor looking to broaden your knowledge of stock market flotations then you will find Initial Public Offerings to be an indispensable guide.







A Study on the Long-Run Performance of Initial Public Offerings in India


Book Description

This paper examines the long run performance of 438 initial public offerings in India that got listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange from 1992 to 2001. It further attempts to identify the factors explaining the long-run performance of IPO firms. The cumulative abnormal return at the end of fifth year is 184.64% which is very high in contrast with the returns observed in the developed countries. Substantial variations have been observed across firms belonging to different age groups and industries. Variations in performance of IPO firms is also evident when firms are segmented according to their initial returns, issue price and issue size. Initial returns, issue size and market conditions primarily explain variations in long run performance of Indian IPOs.