新冠肺炎大流行期间新兴IPO市场投资者人口结构的变化

IF 9 1区 经济学 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE China Finance Review International Pub Date : 2022-11-01 DOI:10.1108/cfri-07-2022-0111
Lokman Tutuncu
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Two-stage least squares and Heckman selection regressions are employed for robustness tests to address potential endogeneity.FindingsPandemic IPOs provide significantly larger short-term returns than pre-pandemic IPOs measured up to one month. Underpricing during the pandemic is not significantly greater due to 10% daily price limit, which leads to a gradual release of retail investor appetite and increase in stock prices in the short term. Retail investors control 66% of the market during the pandemic compared to 35% before, while foreign institutional investor market share declines from 53% to 6%. Average retail investor number in an offering increases by 55.4-fold during the pandemic, resulting in substantially smaller allocations to the average individual investor. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

目的过去两年的特点是首次公开募股(ipo)的数量创纪录,外国投资者的节制和散户投资者对土耳其股票市场的兴趣不断上升。本研究旨在探讨散户主导与外国投资者厌恶是否对初始和短期收益有显著影响。该研究涵盖了从2010年到2021年底在Borsa Istanbul上市的188家公司的人口。提出了三个假设,并通过普通最小二乘和Tobit回归来检验投资者配置与回报之间的关系。一个新的衡量零售投资者的交易规模,平均零售投资人均(ARI)被用来解释零售投资者的胃口和短期回报之间的联系。采用两阶段最小二乘法和Heckman选择回归进行稳健性检验,以解决潜在的内质性问题。研究发现,疫情期间ipo的短期回报明显高于疫情前ipo的一个月回报率。由于每日10%的价格限制,大流行期间的定价低估并未明显加剧,这导致散户投资者的兴趣逐渐释放,短期内股价上涨。大流行期间,散户投资者控制了66%的市场份额,而此前为35%,而外国机构投资者的市场份额从53%下降到6%。在大流行期间,发行中的平均散户投资者人数增加了55.4倍,导致平均个人投资者的分配大大减少。在大流行期间,较高的回报与较小的人均零售投资相关,而国内机构投资与机构投资者通常预期的较低回报相关,尽管在控制了潜在的内生性之后,其重要性就消失了。研究的局限性/意义本研究调查的是一个月以内的退货。为了更好地理解散户投资者的短期主义和近期外国投资者的厌恶情绪是否对公司和整个市场产生不利影响,需要进行更长期的研究。这在现阶段是不可能的,因为时间还不够。由于外国投资者的持续厌恶和快速变化的市场条件,本研究与新兴市场投资者和公司相关。该研究提醒市场参与者警惕散户投资者的短视行为,并敦促政策制定者重新获得具有更长远投资眼光的投资者。社会影响许多新的散户投资者进入股市是因为在土耳其缺乏更有利可图的选择。虽然他们的参与暂时带来了更大的短期回报,但随着大流行结束,世界各地的利率开始上调,目前的势头不太可能持续很长时间。该研究敦促小投资者以更明智的方式进行投资,并以更长远的眼光为目标,因为在不久的将来,在股市上可能无法快速获利。原创性/价值本研究首次调查了疫情宣布后新兴市场投资者形象的变化及其对回报的影响。这个问题很重要,因为投资者的构成会影响市场的投资范围。
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The changing investor demographics of an emerging IPO market during the COVID-19 pandemic
PurposeThe last two years are characterized by record numbers of initial public offerings (IPOs), foreign investor abstinence and rising retail investor appetite in the Turkish stock market. This study aims to investigate whether retail investor dominance coupled with foreign investor aversion has significant impact on initial and short-term returns.Design/methodology/approachThe research covers the population of 188 companies going public at Borsa Istanbul from 2010 to the end of 2021. Three hypotheses are developed and tested by means of ordinary least squares and Tobit regressions to examine the association between investor allocations and returns. A new measure for retail investor trade size, average retail investment per capita (ARI) is utilized to explain the linkage between retail investor appetite and short-term returns. Two-stage least squares and Heckman selection regressions are employed for robustness tests to address potential endogeneity.FindingsPandemic IPOs provide significantly larger short-term returns than pre-pandemic IPOs measured up to one month. Underpricing during the pandemic is not significantly greater due to 10% daily price limit, which leads to a gradual release of retail investor appetite and increase in stock prices in the short term. Retail investors control 66% of the market during the pandemic compared to 35% before, while foreign institutional investor market share declines from 53% to 6%. Average retail investor number in an offering increases by 55.4-fold during the pandemic, resulting in substantially smaller allocations to the average individual investor. Greater returns during the pandemic are associated with smaller retail investment per capita, while domestic institutional investment is associated with lower returns as typically expected from institutional investors, although its significance disappears after controlling for potential endogeneity.Research limitations/implicationsThis study investigates returns up to one month. To better understand whether short-termism of retail investors and recent foreign investor aversion have detrimental effect on companies, and on the market as a whole, longer-term studies are needed. This is not possible at the current stage since not enough time has passed.Practical implicationsThis research is relevant to emerging market investors and companies due to the ongoing foreign investor aversion and fast-changing market conditions. The research cautions market participants against the short-termism of retail investors and urges policymakers to regain investors with longer investment horizons.Social implicationsMany newcomer retail investors are in the stock market due to lack of more profitable alternatives in Turkey. Although their participation is accompanied by larger short-term returns for the time being, the current momentum is unlikely to last long as the pandemic ends, and interest rates around the world begin to be raised. The study urges small investors to invest in a more informed manner and aim for longer time horizons, as it may not be possible to make a quick profit in the stock markets in the near future.Originality/valueThis is the first study to investigate changing investor profile in emerging markets and its impact on returns following pandemic declaration. The question is important because the investor composition affects the investment horizon in the market.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.40
自引率
1.20%
发文量
112
期刊介绍: China Finance Review International publishes original and high-quality theoretical and empirical articles focusing on financial and economic issues arising from China's reform, opening-up, economic development, and system transformation. The journal serves as a platform for exchange between Chinese finance scholars and international financial economists, covering a wide range of topics including monetary policy, banking, international trade and finance, corporate finance, asset pricing, market microstructure, corporate governance, incentive studies, fiscal policy, public management, and state-owned enterprise reform.
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