1995
DOI: 10.2307/2331274
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Under-Diversification and Retention Commitments in IPOs

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Cited by 66 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…First, Welch (1989), Allen and Faulhaber (1989), and Chemmanur (1993) model that only good firms can afford to dissipate wealth by underpricing. Second, Courteau (1995) and Brau, Lambson, and McQueen (2005) model that insiders who commit to a long lockup-a period of time after the IPO in which insiders agree not to sell personal shares-signal firm quality. Third, Teoh, Welch, and Wong (1998) suggest that a history of strong earnings signals future strong performance.…”
Section: Signaling In Iposmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, Welch (1989), Allen and Faulhaber (1989), and Chemmanur (1993) model that only good firms can afford to dissipate wealth by underpricing. Second, Courteau (1995) and Brau, Lambson, and McQueen (2005) model that insiders who commit to a long lockup-a period of time after the IPO in which insiders agree not to sell personal shares-signal firm quality. Third, Teoh, Welch, and Wong (1998) suggest that a history of strong earnings signals future strong performance.…”
Section: Signaling In Iposmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior studies have shown, both analytically and empirically, that signals such as the retention of a significant percentage of firm ownership (Leland and Pyle, 1977;Datar, Feltham, and Hughes, 1991;Courteau, 1995) or the hiring of underwriters and/or auditors of prestige (Beatty and Ritter, 1986;Feltham, Hughes, and Simunic, 1991;Clarkson and Simunic, 1994;Bédard, Coulombe, and Courteau, 2000) can convince potential shareholders of the quality of the issue, thus reducing the need for underpricing. Recent studies suggest that the structure of the board of directors may also be used as a signal of quality of the issuing firm (Certo, Daily, and Dalton, 2001a;Filatotchev and Bishop, 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the lockup behavior cannot be mimicked by low quality firms, insiders may desire the lockup as it signals high quality to the market. Courteau (1995) extends this model and illustrates that insiders of high quality firms voluntarily lock their shares for longer periods of time thereby strengthening the signal of high quality in an environment where information asymmetry is high. Consistent with this view, Brau, Lambson and McQueen (2005) find a positive relation between lockups and firm quality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…The SEO lockup decision has a positive effect on SEO announcement day returns, consistent with the prediction that, due to signaling or commitment device effects, secondary market investors value lockups positively. Courteau (1995) along with Brau, Lambson and McQueen (2005) argues that not only does the presence of a lockup agreement matter, but also the length of a lockup is relevant. A positive association between lockup length and announcement day returns would imply that secondary market investors' valuation of lockups increases with the number of days a lockup agreement is in place.…”
Section: Secondary Market Reactionmentioning
confidence: 99%