Bookbuilding vs. fixed price revisited: The effect of aftermarket trading

Walid Y. Busaba (First Author), Chun Chang (Participant Author)

科研成果: 期刊稿件期刊论文

16 引用 (Web of Science)

摘要

Investors who possess information about the value of an IPO can participate in the offering as well as trade strategically in the aftermarket. Both the bookbuilding and the fixed price IPO selling methods require more underpricing when aftermarket trading by informed investors is considered. Bookbuilding becomes especially costly, since the potential for profit in the aftermarket adversely affects investors' bidding behavior in the premarket. Unless the underwriter can restrict its bookbuilding effort to a small enough subset of the informed investors, a fixed price strategy that allocates the issue to retail investors produces higher proceeds on average, contrary to the conventional wisdom in the literature. We therefore find a benefit to limiting access to the premarket and, hence, provide an efficiency rationale for the practice by American bankers of marketing IPOs to a select group of investors. We also provide unique policy and empirical implications.
源语言英语
页(从-至)370-381
期刊Journal of Corporate Finance
16
3
DOI
已出版 - 2010

Corresponding author email

busaba@ivey.uwo.ca

关键词

  • Aftermarket trading
  • Bookbuilding
  • Fixed price
  • Initial public offerings
  • Price discovery

成果物的来源

  • ABDC-A*
  • SSCI

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