2007
DOI: 10.1093/rfs/hhm018
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Good IPOs Draw in Bad: Inelastic Banking Capacity and Hot Markets

Abstract: We posit that screening IPOs requires specialized labor which, in the short run, is in fixed supply. Hence, a sudden increase in demand for IPO financing increases the compensation of IPO screening labor. Increased compensation results in reduced screening which encourages sub-marginal firms to enter the IPO market, further increasing the demand for screening labor and thus its compensation. The model's conclusions are consistent with empirical findings of increased underpricing during hot markets, positive co… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, it is possible that the quality of analysis of any individual merger decreases with overall merger activity. A similar mechanism is modeled in the work of Khanna, Noe, and Sonti (2009), which finds that banks reduce IPO screening in hot markets because it requires specialized labor, which is in fixed supply.…”
Section: The Quality Of Analysismentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Therefore, it is possible that the quality of analysis of any individual merger decreases with overall merger activity. A similar mechanism is modeled in the work of Khanna, Noe, and Sonti (2009), which finds that banks reduce IPO screening in hot markets because it requires specialized labor, which is in fixed supply.…”
Section: The Quality Of Analysismentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Our second measure of underwriters’ monitoring costs focuses on the supply side of investment banking labor markets. Khanna, Noe, and Sonti (2008) argue that the screening quality of underwriters deteriorates in hot IPO markets due to strong demand for the limited supply of specialized labor available to the investment banking industry. We compute the fraction of MBA graduates placed in the investment banking industry from Columbia Business School ( IB Hiring ) from each sample year 5 .…”
Section: Empirical Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, to the extent that human capital is limited, investors who are faced with a large volume of IPO activity might not be able to engage in appropriate levels of due diligence (Khanna, Noe, and Sonti, 2008). If this is true, the public market staging hypothesis suggests that, because the absence of proper due diligence should be associated with greater uncertainty, investors provide individual firms with less capital when the level of IPO activity is high.…”
Section: Control Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%