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Research@Smith Fall 2004
Strategic Underwriting
in Initial Public Offers
Research by Gerard Hoberg
UNDERPRICING IS COMMON IN INITIAL
PUBLIC OFFERINGS—TO A CERTAIN EXTENT, IT
MAY BE DIFFICULT TO AVOID. BUT SOME
FIRMS CONSISTENTLY SELL NEW STOCK ISSUES
AT A MUCH GREATER DISCOUNT THAN OTHERS.
IS THIS PHENOMENON DRIVEN BY PURELY
COMPETITIVE FORCES, OR BY A SYSTEM THAT
DOES NOT ADEQUATELY PROTECT IPO ISSUERS
FROM PREDATORY UNDERWRITING PRACTICES?
Gerard Hoberg, assistant professor of
finance, is one of many academians
exploring the lines between ethical and
unethical conduct in the wake of the
spectacular corporate scandals of recent
times. In his paper, “Strategic
Underwriting in Initial Public Offers,”
Hoberg examines IPO underpricing,
partial adjustment phenomenon and
underwriter persistence. His is believed
to be the first study to document that
some underwriters persistently
experience initial returns that are
higher than others—significantly higher,
in fact. Hoberg found that underwriters
who were in the highest quartile based
on their past initial returns brought to
market future IPOs with 32.1% initial
returns, compared to just 17.4% for
those in the lowest quartile.
His research indicates that some
underwriters may use underpricing as a
profitmaximizing strategy, to the
detriment of the issuers, average
investors and the engine that drives
business development. Hoberg created a
new measure of underwriter reputation
based on each underwriter’s initial past
returns to quantify his results. Unlike
existing measures, it is among the most
significant predictors of future initial
returns.
Though Hoberg started with seven
logical hypotheses to explain why
certain underwriters persistently
discount stock prices to a far greater
extent than their fellows, he quickly
eliminated five of them. Underwriter
prestige, industry specialization, or
short-term hot IPO markets clearly could
not explain persistent under-pricing.
Nor did it seem to be a way to
compensate underwriters for providing
better services to issuers, or a simple
matter of habitual, behavioral
underpricing by some underwriters.
Rather, Hoberg’s evidence supports
two hypotheses. The first is that
underwriters who discount more tend to
serve institutional, rather than retail,
investors. When the price of a new issue
is too low, the issue is often
oversubscribed. Investors aren’t able to
purchase all of the shares they want,
and underwriters can allocate shares
among subscribers. Hoberg believes
institutional underwriters like Goldman
Sachs and Morgan Stanley benefit from
consistent underpricing because they
work with large industries, with whom
they are able to organize profitable
quid pro quo arrangements in exchange
for preferment. Retail underwriters like
Paine Webber or AG Edwards & Sons, on
the other hand, work mainly with small
investors and so don’t have the same
opportunity for quid pro quo benefits,
according to Hoberg.
“Institutional underwriters
persistently underprice because it is
profitable for them,” says Hoberg
bluntly. “They would say that they
choose the investors whose hands are the
strongest, to build a stable investment
base for the issuer. But these same
institutional investors often sell their
shares within days of the IPO, while the
average investor holds on to stocks for
a long time.”
Hoberg acknowledges that his second
hypothesis is controversial. He suggests
that underwriters who persistently
discount stock prices are better at
identifying companies which are
undervalued by the public and are able
to take advantage of their own access to
information not available to the public.
Existing academic work suggests that
underwriters know how much an IPO firm
is really worth at the time they set the
IPO price. Hoberg’s work suggests that
underwriters treat good news and bad
news regarding the firm’s value
differently. Underwriters reveal bad
news because it gives them a reason to
lower the IPO price, but they may
deliberately conceal good news in order
to avoid raising the IPO price. This
allows them to extract the surplus value
associated with this good news in the
form of quid pro quos from the
institutional investors to whom they
allocate these deeply discounted shares.
For underwriters, then, knowledge is
definitely power—or at least profit.
The practice of persistently
discounting stock prices in IPOs has a
distinct downside. “There are two
effective losers—the issuers and
society,” says Hoberg. “The issuers lose
because they realize less capital on
their IPO when their stock is
underpriced. But society loses too,
because of the wealth loss involved when
that issuing company isn’t able to grow
as fast and create as many new jobs. It
results in deadweight loss in the
economy.” Average investors also lose
out when stocks are highly discounted,
simply because they are unable to get
shares in an oversubscribed offering.
Random allocation, Hoberg believes,
would make it much less profitable for
underwriters to persistently underprice.
“If you take away an underwriter’s
ability to profit from allocation, then
they would be relying simply on
commission for profit. And competition
will drive commissions to the right
level.”
Hoberg is working on a second paper
to discuss the theoretical and policy
implications of this study. Hoberg may
be reached by e-mail at
ghoberg@rhsmith.umd.edu.
IN THIS ISSUE
Modeling the
Dynamics of Online Auctions
Research by Galit Shmueli, Wolfgang Jank
A New Look At The
Debate Over Sending Jobs Overseas
Research by Susan Feinberg, Gordon
Phillips
►Strategic
Underwriting in Initial Public Offers
Research by Gerard Hoberg
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Research@Smith Fall 2004, Volume 5,
Number 2
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