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Does the Involvement of Expert Intermediaries Improve the Aftermarket Survivability of IPO Firms? Evidence from Industry Specialist Auditors and Reputable Venture Capitalists. Ting-Kai Chou Jia-Chi Cheng Chin-Chen Chien National Cheng-Kung University, Taiwan. Motivations.
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Does the Involvement of Expert Intermediaries Improve the Aftermarket Survivability of IPO Firms? Evidence from Industry Specialist Auditors and Reputable Venture Capitalists Ting-Kai Chou Jia-Chi Cheng Chin-Chen Chien National Cheng-Kung University, Taiwan
Motivations • the tendency of IPO delistings occur within a few years of issuance (Jain and Kini 1999 ) • a dramatic decline in the survival rates of newly listed firms (IPOs)(Fama and French 2004)
Motivations • Investors in IPOs would suffer huge losses with the declining performance or even failure of the newly listed companies. • What would affect the survival rate of IPO?
Objectives • IPO firms have no sufficient information and have a greater uncertainty associated with their valuation and assessed future delisting risk (Webber and Willenborg 2003) • Market intermediaries help to reduce information asymmetry problems (Fargher el al. 2000;Mitchell et al. 1997) • Screening, monitoring, and value-adding affairs
Objectives • Reputable intermediaries bear a reputation cost • We examine whether the expert (or reputable)intermediaries are good improvers of aftermarket survivability of IPO firm. • auditors • venture capitalists
Auditors’ industry focus • In the prior studies, audit firm size is commonly used as a proxy for audit quality (Palmrose 1988;Teoh and Wong 1993;Becker et al. 1998) • Industry specialization represents an additional level of auditors’ service quality (Dunn and Mayhew 2004)
Hypothesis development • IPO firms have a greater need for a strategic and technical advisor. • Industry expertise enable auditors to identify and address industry specific problems and risks of IPO clients (Brown and Raghunandan 1995;Craswell and Taylor 1991) improve the IPO issuers’ competitive advantages, translating into higher aftermarket survivability
Hypothesis 1 • H1a: Firms retaining an auditor with industry specialization in the IPO process are less likely to be delisted from the stock exchange. • H1b:Firms retaining an auditor with industry specialization in the IPO process are less likely to be delisted sooner from the stock exchange.
The Role of VCs in the IPO Context • VC firms may provide a wide range of benefits to a young, high-growth privately held companies • screening • cash funding • monitoring • value-adding expertise
Hypothesis development • The quality of services VCs provide may be not homogenous, and probably hinges on their reputation level (Hall and Hofer, 1993). • Intangible reputation of VC firm is driven by the activity and especially the proven success in terms of the number of companies they have taken public (Hellmann, 2000).
Hypothesis development • A VC firm with strong track records may provide higher value-enhancing service quality than other VCs. improve involved IPO issuers’ performance and ultimately chance of survival
Hypothesis 2 • H2a: Firms backed by reputable VCs in the IPO process are less likely to be delisted from the stock exchange. • H2b:Firms backed by reputable VCs in the IPO process are less likely to be delisted sooner from the stock exchange.
IPO Data • U.S. IPOs spanning from 1991-2000 • Data sources • SDC • Compustat • CRSP
“Delisting” Classification • We classify firms as “delisted” if their CRSP delisting codes are in the 400-range or the 500-range, excluding firms with delisting codes of 501-503 and 573. • failure to meet listing standards • financial distress • Liquation • insufficient capital • lack of liquidity
Econometric Methods-1Logit Analysis • Logit regression analysis • the impact of reputable auditors and VCs on the IPOs’ delisting rate • Empirical model:
Econometric Methods-2Survival Analysis • Cox proportional hazard analysis • model firm survival in “IPO life expectancy” to conduct calendar time-based analyses • Empirical model:
Explanatory Variables • Industry Specialist Auditor • Reputable Venture Capitalist • We identify VC firms’ reputation in a given year based on their past cumulative IPO market share. • high reputation when its both volume and dollar market share fall in the top half of market shares.
Interactive Comparison of Non-industry specialists and Non-Big 5s’, Non-industry specialists and Big 5s’ and industry specialist auditors’ IPO Clients
Interactive Comparison of non-VC-backed, VC-backed and Reputed VC-backed IPO Firms
Survival Curve for IPOs (Non-Specialist and Non-Big 5-backed vs. Non-Specialist and Big 5-backed vs. Industry Specialist Auditor-backed IPOs)
Survival Curve for IPOs (Non VC-backed vs. Non-reputed VC-backed vs. Reputed VC-backed IPOs)
Contributions • Delisting of IPO stocks due to financial distress is one measure of long-run performance that avoids the controversies surrounding appropriate risk benchmarks. • We are the first one to demonstrate that industry specialist auditors are associated with IPO firms that are less likely to fail.
Contributions • We try to develop a simple reputation measure to differentiate among VC firms. • Compared to Jain and Kini (2000), we present supplementary evidence that only reputable VC participation can effectively improve the survivability of IPO issuers.
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