Discussion paper

DP1211 Underpricing, Ownership and Control in Initial Public Offerings of Equity Securities in the UK

In this paper we examine how separation of ownership and control evolves as a result of an initial public offering (IPO) and how the underpricing of the issue can be used by insiders to retain control. Using data from a sample of 69 IPOs in the United Kingdom, we argue that IPO underpricing is used to ensure over-subscription and rationing in the share allocation process so as to allow owners to discriminate between applicants for shares and reduce the block size of new shareholdings. We find that of the pre-IPO shareholders in a firm, directors sell only a small fraction of their shares at the time of the offering and in the seven subsequent years; in contrast, holdings of non-directors are virtually eliminated during the same period. As a result, in less than seven years almost two-thirds of the offering company's shares have been sold to outside shareholders, thereby substantially advancing the process of separation of ownership and control. Additional evidence in the paper suggests that rationing in the IPO discriminates against applicants who apply for large blocks, and that the greater the underpricing, the smaller the size of new blocks assembled after the IPO.

£6.00
Citation

Franks, J and M Brennan (1995), ‘DP1211 Underpricing, Ownership and Control in Initial Public Offerings of Equity Securities in the UK‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 1211. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp1211