TitleIPO auctions and private information
AuthorsLin, Ji-Chai
Lee, Yi-Tsung
Liu, Yu-Jane
AffiliationLouisiana State Univ, Dept Finance, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA.
Natl Chengchi Univ, Taipei, Taiwan.
Peking Univ, Guanghua Sch, Beijing, Peoples R China.
KeywordsIPOs
competitive bidding
institutional investors
private information
INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS
MUTUAL FUND PERFORMANCE
ORDER BOOK
ALLOCATIONS
OWNERSHIP
INVESTORS
BEHAVIOR
ISSUES
MONEY
MODEL
Issue Date2007
Publisherjournal of banking finance
CitationJOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE.2007,31,(5),1483-1500.
AbstractIPO auctions, which provide an impartial way of determining IPO pricing and share allocations, offer a natural setting for examining whether institutional investors possess private information, and for measuring how valuable their information is. Analyzing detailed bidding data from Taiwan's discriminatory (pay-as-bid) auctions, we find that, relative to retail investors, institutional investors tend to bid higher in auctions when IPO shares are more valuable, and that underpricing is larger in auctions with relatively higher institutional bids. These results imply that institutional investors are better informed about IPO value, and that they obtain higher information rents when they bid higher relative to retail investors. We estimate the value of institutional investors' private information to be worth about 8.68% of return, which is the extra rate of return they command on their informational advantages over retail investors. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/260466
ISSN0378-4266
DOI10.1016/j.jbankfin.2006.09.004
IndexedSSCI
Appears in Collections:光华管理学院

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