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IPO anomalies and innovation capital
Authors:Chen-Lung Chin  Picheng Lee  Gary Kleinman  Pei-Yu Chen
Affiliation:(1) Department of Accounting, National Chengchi University, No. 64, Sec 2, Jhihnan Rd., Taipei City, Taiwan, 116;(2) Department of Accounting, Lubin School of Business, Pace University, New York, NY 10038, USA;(3) Department of Accounting and Taxation, Robert Morris University, Moon Township, PA, USA;(4) Department of Accounting, National Chang-Hua University, Chang-Hua, Taiwan
Abstract:Innovation capital are typically expensed and/or unrecognized as assets under current generally accepted accounting principles. This results in accounting-related information asymmetry. This paper examines the association of innovation capital (as measured here by the proxies of R&D expenditures and granted patents) and initial public offerings (IPO) anomalies. These anomalies include initial IPO underpricing, duration of honeymoon (a distinct feature of the Taiwanese IPO environment), and long-term performance. The theoretical model underlying this research is a signaling model. The results indicate that more innovative firms are more likely to be underpriced, and have longer honeymoon periods than less innovative firms. Further, the more innovative firms have positive and growing long-term market-adjusted returns. This stands in contrast to the declining long-term stock performance of initial public offering firms that is evidenced in the literature. We conclude that pre-IPO research and development expenditures disclosed in the IPO prospectus, official monthly reports of newly developed patents released to the public, and the frequency of patent citations significantly signal both underpricing and future market performance of IPO firms in Taiwan.
Keywords:Anomalies  Initial public offerings  Innovation capital  Patent  R&  D  Signaling
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