Quality shock vs. market shock: Lessons from recently established rapidly growing U.S. startups |
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Authors: | Hyung Rok Yim |
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Affiliation: | Korea Institute for Industrial Economics & Trade (KIET), Seoul 130-742, Republic of Korea |
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Abstract: | The 2003 Fortune 500 Index includes 358 firms that had been newly listed within the previous 10 years; historically this is a large number of firms in a relatively short time period. In particular, among the 358 new Fortune 500 entrants founded after 1975, 44 are defined as “rapid-growth” startups. Simulation results based on a discrete-choice racing model demonstrate that they were able to outperform their early competitors through a quality innovation race. They were resistant to hostile M&A attempts as well. According to the empirical results, a quality shock affects the size growth and profitability of the rapid-growth startups more than a market shock does, which indicates that such superior performance owes to firm-specific innovation ability rather than to market fluctuations. |
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Keywords: | Startups Quality and market shocks Innovation race Mergers and acquisitions Performance |
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