IPO Pricing in the Dot-com Bubble
William J. Wilhelm and
Alexander Ljungqvist ()
OFRC Working Papers Series from Oxford Financial Research Centre
Abstract:
IPO initial returns reached astronomical levels during 1999-2000. We show that the regime shift in initial returns and other elements of pricing behavior can be at least partially accounted for by a variety of marked changes in pre-IPO ownership structure and insider selling behavior over the period, which reduced key decision-makers' incentives to control underpricing. After controlling for these changes, the difference in underpricing between 1999-2000 and the preceding three years is much reduced. Our results suggest that it was firm characteristics that were unique during the "dot-com bubble" and that pricing behavior followed from incentives created by these characteristics.
Date: 2002
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ent
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Related works:
Journal Article: IPO Pricing in the Dot‐com Bubble (2003) 
Working Paper: IPO Pricing in the dot-com Bubble (2002) 
Working Paper: IPO Pricing in the Dot-com Bubble (2002)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sbs:wpsefe:2002fe07
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