Author
Abstract
Purpose - The study examines the IPO resilience grounded on the firm’s intrinsic factors. Design/methodology/approach - We examine the association of IPO performance and post-listing firm’s performance with issuers' pre-listing financial and qualitative traits using panel data regression. Findings - IPOs floated in the Indian market from July 2009 to March 31, 2022, evince the notable influence of issuers' pre-IPO fundamentals and legitimacy traits on IPO returns and post-listing earning power. Where the pandemic’s favorable impact is discerned on the post-listing year earning power of the issuer firms, the loss-making issuers appear to be adversely affected by the Covid disruption. Perhaps, the successful listing equipped the issuers with the financial flexibility to combat market challenges vis-à-vis failed issuers deprived of desired IPO proceeds. Research limitations/implications - High initial returns followed by a declining pattern substantiate the retail investors to be less informed vis-à-vis initial investors, valuers and underwriters, who exit post-listing after profit booking. Investing in the shares of the newly listed ventures post-listing in the secondary market can shield retail investors from the uncertainty losses of being uninformed. The IPO market needs stringent regulations ensuring the verification of the listing valuation, the firm’s credentials and the intent of utilizing IPO proceeds. Healthy development of the IPO market merits reconsidering the listing of ventures with weak fundamentals suspected to withstand the market challenges. Originality/value - Given the tremendous rise in the new firm venturing into the primary market and the spike in IPOs countering the losses immediately post-opening, the study examines the loss-making and young firms IPOs separately, adding novelty to the study.
Suggested Citation
Anshu Agrawal, 2024.
"IPO performance anomaly: evidence from new aged ventures and loss-making listings in India,"
Journal of Advances in Management Research, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 21(3), pages 421-448, April.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:jamrpp:jamr-07-2023-0197
DOI: 10.1108/JAMR-07-2023-0197
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JEL classification:
- G10 - Financial Economics - - General Financial Markets - - - General (includes Measurement and Data)
- G19 - Financial Economics - - General Financial Markets - - - Other
- G40 - Financial Economics - - Behavioral Finance - - - General
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