The dramatic growth of equity markets
throughout the last decade has, to a large extent, been a result of the
increasing number of companies that chose to list their stock on public
markets via an initial public offering (IPO). The number and frequency
of IPOs has risen impressively in the US, in Europe and in many
developing countries. This is part of a worldwide shift away from
private or bank finance, towards funding via public security markets.
The process is commonly explained by the decreased cost of equity
capital and the increased availability of equity finance associated with
more integrated capital markets and faster information linkages.
Improvements in the design and performance of primary equity markets may
also have contributed to this process. Among these are the diffusion of
book-building techniques, better disclosure rules, greater expertise and
competition among investment banks and, possibly, competition among
stock markets.
Held in Capri on 16/18 June 2000, a
joint CEPR/CSEF/NYSE/TMR Conference assessed the improvements in the
design and performance of primary equity markets and their subsequent
implications. The insights that could be taken away from the papers
presented fall broadly in two classes: those concerning the
microeconomic aspects of IPOs, and those concerning the overall
performance and macroeconomic impact of the primary equity market.
The Microeconomics of IPOs
It is well known that 'IPO
underpricing' is a key determinant of the cost of equity capital for
companies that tap the stock market for the first time. Typically, the
price at which the shares of an IPO are placed with investors is below
the level that they reach on the market a few days or weeks later, when
more complete public information is available. Most research by
financial economists relates such underpricing to the presence of some
investors endowed with superior information about the value of the IPO
shares, or to the need to compensate professional investors for the
costs of producing information about the company.
The conference added three important
insights to this much-researched topic. First, IPO underpricing is lower
when other companies go public, because each IPO generates beneficial
information externalities for other companies that are about to go
public. Second, designing the IPO procedure also matters: bookbuilding
allows substantial cost savings, but these savings materialize only if
underwriters are willing to let the issue price vary outside the range
initially chosen in response to demand. The third insight concerns the
motivation itself of the IPO process: the going public decision is
influenced by firms' ownership structure. When their shares are held by
only one owner and when banks own shares, then companies are more likely
to prefer private rather than public sales of equity.
The first paper, entitled 'Evidence of
Information Spillovers in the Production of Investment Banking Services'
by Lawrence Benveniste (Carlson School of Management, University of
Minnesota), William Wilhelm (Boston College) and Xiaoyun Yu, highlighted
various implications for information externalities in the IPO process:
bunching by industry, implicit subsidies from the leader to the
followers and the tendency for monopolistic financial intermediaries to
engage in less underpricing when many companies go public. These
predictions are consistent with the evidence from US IPOs, where the
contemporaneous number of IPOs affects the estimated proceeds in the
pre-offer period, and IPO underpricing is reduced by clustering and by
firm-specific information that was not publicly available. Moreover, the
information spillover is twice as large for information-sensitive
industries than for other industries.
The second paper, entitled 'Has the
Introduction of Bookbuilding Increased the Efficiency of International
IPOs?' and co-authored by Tim Jenkinson (University of Oxford and CEPR),
Alexander Ljungqvist (University of Oxford and CEPR) and William
Wilhelm, used a large cross-country data set to show that bookbuilding
can reduce costs if certain other conditions are also met. The authors
illustrate that bookbuilding has higher costs but countervailing
benefits when the IPO is marketed by US banks and sold to US investors.
Jenkinson et al attribute these benefits to the US underwriters'
willingness to price outside the initial range: placements directed to
US investors are often priced outside the initial range by as much as
30%. This may reflect the lack of legal or regulatory impediments as
well as greater transparency and competition for issues marketed by US
banks to US investors. Non-US banks appear reluctant to respond to
unexpectedly high demand by raising prices outside the initial range,
possibly due to the power of large investors, and this undermines
bookbuilding.
The above result was confirmed by
Francesca Cornelli (London Business School and CEPR) and David Goldreich
(London Business School) in their paper 'Bookbuilding: How Informative
is the Order Book?'. The two authors explore the actual order books for
64 international issues sold by a European investment bank. The results
show a high percentage of issues priced at the top of the initial price
range, with a substantial oversubscription at the issue price (the
average IPO being oversubscribed 10 times).
The discussion of these two papers
brought to the fore the idea that underpricing depends not just on the
sale method (bookbuilding versus other mechanisms) but also on the
objective function of underwriters and their regulatory constraints. If
underwriters try to design the optimal mechanism to maximize the
seller's objective function and are unconstrained by regulation, then
almost by definition they should do best with a bookbuilding mechanism,
which allows them to extract information useful to set the issue price,
as shown by Cornelli and Goldreich.
The real question is whether
underwriters have the 'right' objective function, face tough competition
and are unrestricted by regulatory constraints. For the US underwriters,
this seems to be the case, which helps explain why they dominate the IPO
industry. By the same token, insufficient competition among bidders and
collusion between investment bankers and bidders may explain the higher
IPO underpricing when US banks are not involved. This may change in the
future, partly because more sophisticated auction methods via the
Internet may enhance the competition among bidders and the transparency
of IPO sales.
The conference also added new insights
into the motives of companies that go public. The identity of the
initial owners of the company appears to play an important role in this
decision. Ekkehart Böehmer (US Securities and Exchange Commission) and
Alexander Ljungqvist, in their paper 'The Choice of Outside Equity:
Evidence on Privately-held Firms', analyse 266 German firms that have
pre-announced their intention to go public and show that firms that
issue new shares are more likely to complete the IPO process. In
contrast, other companies, and in particular those that have majority
owners or a bank among the shareholders, tend to use the
pre-announcement to signal their willingness to find new partners but
eventually remain private.
In 'Why do Governments List Privatized
Companies Abroad?' Bernardo Bortolotti (FEEM, Università di Torino),
Marcella Fantini and Carlo Scarpa (Università di Bologna) demonstrate
that when a company is being privatized, political variables also play
an important role in the decision to go public. In particular, the
decision to list companies abroad appears to reflect a desire to lock
them into a more investor-friendly legal framework, presumably in order
to sell their shares at a better price. Examining 342 listings of
privatized companies in 42 countries, the authors find that privatized
companies from OECD countries tend to cross-list abroad in countries
offering better legal protection of shareholders.
Overall Performance and
Macroeconomic Impact of the Primary Equity Market
Even if market participants do as well
as possible in designing the sale mechanisms of new stock issues, two
important questions still remain. First, is it possible (and worthwhile)
to try to encourage IPOs by fostering the venture capital industry and
by setting up special markets such as the 'new markets' that have
recently sprung up in Europe? And second, should the markets where these
new issues are traded be designed and regulated in any special way?
Claudio Michelacci and Javier Suárez
(CEMFI, Madrid, and CEPR) shed some light on the first issue with their
theoretical paper on 'Business Creation and the Stock Market'. They show
that the 'informed capital' of venture capitalists and the stock market
play complementary roles: the stock market allows venture capitalists to
recycle their scarce informed capital. The logic of their model is that
new businesses require a special type of capitalist who can solve
information and incentive problems, and thereby allow these firms to
postpone their IPO until their profitability prospects are clearer. The
scarcity of this informed capital therefore acts as a constraint on the
rate of business creation. The lower the listing costs of firms, the
faster venture capitalists can unload the firms they have catered for on
the stock market and 'recycle' their informed capital with new
businesses.
This suggests that any policy that can
reduce the listing costs of new businesses will translate into faster
recycling of informed capital and faster real growth. Within this
framework, the difference between the IPO market (and the rate of
business creation) in Europe and in the US could be attributed to higher
listing costs and lower availability of venture capital in Europe. But,
as Patrick Bolton (Princeton University and CEPR) noted, it is not clear
if the European bottleneck lies in a scarcity of informed capital or in
a scarcity of valuable and innovative projects to be funded.
Even assuming that listing costs are
higher in Europe than in the US (an assumption for which currently there
is no solid evidence), the evidence provided by Asher Blass and Yishay
Yafeh (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) suggests that listing costs are
not of crucial importance in the decision to go public. In their paper
'Vagabond Shoes Longing to Stray: Why Foreign Firms List in the United
States', they show that high-tech, high-growth, export-oriented Israeli
companies flock on to the Nasdaq, forgoing the substantial tax benefits
of listing in Tel Aviv. These companies do not even try to reap such
benefits by cross-listing their shares in Israel after listing in the
US. In fact, Blass and Yafeh argue that these Israeli companies list in
the US precisely because listing there is costlier than in Israel: they
do so in order to signal their superior quality. Only firms with very
large growth and profit opportunities can face the larger costs of an
IPO in the US, in terms of lower private benefits of control, larger
underpricing and underwriting fees, and forgone tax benefits in Israel.
A similar signalling story was told by
Jörg Kukies (University of Chicago) to explain why the recent IPO boom
in Germany was associated with the creation of the Neuer Markt (NM) in
1997. Firms admitted for listing to the NM must be first admitted to the
traditional exchange of the Deutsche Börse. Additionally, they must
fulfil other requirements, especially in terms of information
dissemination and accounting rules. Therefore the companies that went
public on the NM could have gone public before, but did not. In his
paper on 'The Effects of Introducing a New Stock Exchange on the IPO
process', Kukies argues that the NM's stringent information disclosure
requirements provided a precommitment device that did not exist before.
Listing on the NM acted as a signalling device for the most promising
companies, in the same way as listing on Nasdaq does for the best
Israeli companies, according to Blass and Yafeh.
However, as Oren Sussman (Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev) remarked, the requirements imposed by the 'new
markets' in Europe are not uniformly stricter. They are stricter about
information disclosure but less restrictive about age, past
profitability and size, and also allow companies to sell a smaller
fraction of their shares to outside shareholders than traditional
exchanges. Hence it is natural to ask which matters more, the strictness
on disclosure or the greater leniency in these other dimensions? The
evidence provided by Kukies is not based on a 'clean' experiment. At the
same time as the NM was being created, US investment banks entered the
German IPO market, German banks themselves became more supportive of
IPOs and the demand for stocks rose dramatically, especially for
high-tech stocks.
Whatever the intrinsic merits of the
requirements imposed by the Nasdaq and the NM, it should be evident that
both the design of these markets and the listing choices of the
companies across markets are endogenous. Increasingly, stock markets
tend to compete for listings with each other, and will tend to
differentiate their listing requirements and trading mechanisms so as to
soften such competition. This is illustrated by Thierry Foucault (HEC
School of Management, Jouy en Josas, and CEPR) and Christine Parlour in
their paper 'Competition for Listings'. For instance, a possible
equilibrium configuration is one in which one market displays low
trading costs but high listing fees while another does the opposite. The
first market will be attractive for large companies, which will be ready
to pay the high listing fees in return for a more liquid market for
their shares, whereas the second market will specialize in smaller
companies – an example strikingly reminiscent of the differences
between the NYSE and Nasdaq.
Rapporteur: Marco Pagano (Università
di Salerno and CEPR)
The Conference papers can be
downloaded from www.cepr.org/meets/wkcn/5/554/