政府公共政策、监管干预及其对IPO抑价的影响:马来西亚IPO案例

Government Public Policy, Regulatory Intervention, and Their Impact on IPO Underpricing: The Case of Malaysian IPOs

JOURNAL OF SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT · 2005
被引 43
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究了马来西亚1976年要求至少30%新股售给土著的政策,发现该监管导致IPO首日抑价平均增加61%,且长期持续高抑价,与发达国家不同。

Abstract

This study examines the impact of government initial public offering (IPO) regulation intending on promoting public policy. The study examines the results of the implementation of a Malaysian government policy in 1976, which mandated that at least 30 percent of any new shares on an IPO offer be sold to the indigenous Bumiputera population or to mutual funds owned by them. The study examined the short-run and long-run underpricing of Malaysian IPOs and found that Malaysian IPOs are highly underpriced compared to IPOs in developing countries, creating a market microstructure effect. It also confirmed that the Malaysian government's regulatory intervention in spite of noble public policy intentions appeared to be the significant factor for the emergence of an average first-day underpricing increase of Malaysian IPOs by 61 percent during the period after the regulatory economic policy was instituted. Furthermore, the study found that this high underpricing persists even for the long run, in contrast to the long-run performance of IPOs in the United States.

首次公开募股政府监管公共政策金融市场马来西亚