reviewThe Journal of FinanceAug 1, 2002Closed access

A Review of IPO Activity, Pricing, and Allocations

Yale University

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Abstract

ABSTRACT We review the theory and evidence on IPO activity: why firms go public, why they reward first‐day investors with considerable underpricing, and how IPOs perform in the long run. Our perspective is threefold: First, we believe that many IPO phenomena are not stationary. Second, we believe research into share allocation issues is the most promising area of research in IPOs at the moment. Third, we argue that asymmetric information is not the primary driver of many IPO phenomena. Instead, we believe future progress in the literature will come from nonrational and agency conflict explanations. We describe some promising such alternatives.

Citation impact

2,488
total citations
FWCI
152.77
Percentile
100%
References
142
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Initial public offering
  • Agency (philosophy)
  • Perspective (graphical)
  • Business
  • Economics
  • Financial economics
  • Accounting
  • Computer science
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