We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase in demand for IPO financing increases the compensation of IPO screening labor. This results in reduced screening, encouraging sub-marginal firms to enter the IPO market, further fueling the demand for screening labor. The model's conclusions are consistent with empirical findings of increased underpricing during hot markets, positive correlation between issue volume and underpricing, and with tipping points between hot and cold markets. Finally, the model makes sharp predictions relating the IPO market to fundamental values of firms and to investment banking returns
This paper investigates to which extent multifactor asset pricing models can explain the pricing of ...
This Version: 2005. We explain the clustering of underpricing in initial public offerings (IPOs). Th...
In this paper, I explore whether the expected economic condition plays a role in determining the deg...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which, in the short run, is in fixed supply....
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
This paper develops a real options model in which firms may use the timing of their initial public o...
The literature on IPOs offers a wide variety of explanations to justify the dramatic swings in the v...
We model the dynamics of going public within an IPO wave. The model predicts that firms with better ...
We develop a model in which time-varying real investment opportunities lead to time-varying adverse ...
We investigate whether initial public offerings (IPO) occurring during hot markets are fundamentally...
Our model of the initial public offering process links the three main empirical IPO ‘anomalies’ – un...
This paper studies the pricing of IPOs in a tractable model in which an investment bank faces some i...
The Nordic markets have in recent years been flooded by IPOs, which have attracted the attention of ...
This paper investigates to which extent multifactor asset pricing models can explain the pricing of ...
This Version: 2005. We explain the clustering of underpricing in initial public offerings (IPOs). Th...
In this paper, I explore whether the expected economic condition plays a role in determining the deg...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which, in the short run, is in fixed supply....
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which is in fixed supply. A sudden increase ...
This paper develops a real options model in which firms may use the timing of their initial public o...
The literature on IPOs offers a wide variety of explanations to justify the dramatic swings in the v...
We model the dynamics of going public within an IPO wave. The model predicts that firms with better ...
We develop a model in which time-varying real investment opportunities lead to time-varying adverse ...
We investigate whether initial public offerings (IPO) occurring during hot markets are fundamentally...
Our model of the initial public offering process links the three main empirical IPO ‘anomalies’ – un...
This paper studies the pricing of IPOs in a tractable model in which an investment bank faces some i...
The Nordic markets have in recent years been flooded by IPOs, which have attracted the attention of ...
This paper investigates to which extent multifactor asset pricing models can explain the pricing of ...
This Version: 2005. We explain the clustering of underpricing in initial public offerings (IPOs). Th...
In this paper, I explore whether the expected economic condition plays a role in determining the deg...