IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?

This paper separates the amount of IPO underpricing (primary market underpricing) and overvaluation (secondary market overvaluation) from the value of an IPO’s initial return to evaluate the relative importance of these two factors and their main determinants. Using data on the IPOs of 948 Chinese f...

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Main Authors: Shunlin Song, JinSong Tan, Yang Yi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-03-01
Series:China Journal of Accounting Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309113000531
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spelling doaj-910ca80e73bf4d91b80987c0093185082020-11-25T01:09:24ZengElsevierChina Journal of Accounting Research1755-30912014-03-0171314910.1016/j.cjar.2013.12.001IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?Shunlin Song0JinSong Tan1Yang Yi2School of Accountancy, Central University of Finance and Economics, ChinaSchool of Business, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaSchool of Business, Sun Yat-sen University, ChinaThis paper separates the amount of IPO underpricing (primary market underpricing) and overvaluation (secondary market overvaluation) from the value of an IPO’s initial return to evaluate the relative importance of these two factors and their main determinants. Using data on the IPOs of 948 Chinese firms, we find that average initial returns are 66% and that underpricing and overvaluation are between 14–22% and 44–53%, respectively, depending on the method used to assess firms’ intrinsic values. In addition, while both the value of the initial return and the extent of overvaluation are significantly negatively related to post-IPO long-run stock performance, overvaluation can predict post-IPO performance better than the value of the initial return. Value uncertainty in IPOs is positively related to both underpricing and overvaluation, and both the underwriter’s reputation and the existence of pricing regulation are positively related to underpricing. Investor sentiment has a positive effect on overvaluation but has no effect or a negative effect on underpricing. Overall, our results suggest that in China overvaluation accounts for a larger proportion of the initial return than underpricing, and that underpricing and overvaluation have different determinants.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309113000531IPO initial returnIPO underpricingIPO overvaluationPost-IPO long-run stock performanceDeterminants
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shunlin Song
JinSong Tan
Yang Yi
spellingShingle Shunlin Song
JinSong Tan
Yang Yi
IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
China Journal of Accounting Research
IPO initial return
IPO underpricing
IPO overvaluation
Post-IPO long-run stock performance
Determinants
author_facet Shunlin Song
JinSong Tan
Yang Yi
author_sort Shunlin Song
title IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
title_short IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
title_full IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
title_fullStr IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
title_full_unstemmed IPO initial returns in China: Underpricing or overvaluation?
title_sort ipo initial returns in china: underpricing or overvaluation?
publisher Elsevier
series China Journal of Accounting Research
issn 1755-3091
publishDate 2014-03-01
description This paper separates the amount of IPO underpricing (primary market underpricing) and overvaluation (secondary market overvaluation) from the value of an IPO’s initial return to evaluate the relative importance of these two factors and their main determinants. Using data on the IPOs of 948 Chinese firms, we find that average initial returns are 66% and that underpricing and overvaluation are between 14–22% and 44–53%, respectively, depending on the method used to assess firms’ intrinsic values. In addition, while both the value of the initial return and the extent of overvaluation are significantly negatively related to post-IPO long-run stock performance, overvaluation can predict post-IPO performance better than the value of the initial return. Value uncertainty in IPOs is positively related to both underpricing and overvaluation, and both the underwriter’s reputation and the existence of pricing regulation are positively related to underpricing. Investor sentiment has a positive effect on overvaluation but has no effect or a negative effect on underpricing. Overall, our results suggest that in China overvaluation accounts for a larger proportion of the initial return than underpricing, and that underpricing and overvaluation have different determinants.
topic IPO initial return
IPO underpricing
IPO overvaluation
Post-IPO long-run stock performance
Determinants
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309113000531
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AT jinsongtan ipoinitialreturnsinchinaunderpricingorovervaluation
AT yangyi ipoinitialreturnsinchinaunderpricingorovervaluation
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