Title: Insider Trading Following Lockup Expiration and the
1Insider Trading Following Lockup Expiration and
the Long-Run Stock Performance of Initial Public
Offerings
Hsuan-Chi Chen Anderson School of
Management University of New Mexico
Sheng-Syan Chen Department of Finance National
Taiwan University
Chia-Wei Huang Department of Finance National
Taiwan University
2Research Purpose
- On their IPO prospectuses IPO firms specify share
lockup agreements, which restrict insiders and
other pre-IPO shareholders from selling their
shares before a certain date, ranging from
several days to several years with a mode of 180
days. - Regarding insider selling following IPO lockup,
the corporate insiders of IPO firms usually state
that they sell their shares to diversify their
portfolios or meet their liquidity needs.
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3Research Purpose (conti.)
- Some investment gurus or investors express their
concerns with the message sent by corporate
insiders because of weak commitment or
information asymmetry existing between insiders
and outsiders. - Our paper makes a study of IPO lockups and
insider trading following the lockup expiration,
and examines the relationship between post-lockup
insider trading and the long-run performance of
IPOs.
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4Literature Review
- Field and Hanka (2001) examine the short-run
abnormal return and trading volume around IPO
lockup expiration. - Bradley, Jordan, Roten, and Yi (2001) examine the
stock price behavior in the period surrounding
lockup expiration of venture-backed and
non-venture-backed IPOs over 1988 to 1997. - Aggarwal, Krigman, and Womack (2002) develop and
test a model that investigates the interaction
among strategic IPO underpricing, information
momentum, and insider selling around lockup
expiration.
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5Literature Review (conti.)
- Brav and Gompers (2003) test three potential
explanations for the existence of IPO lockups. - Cao, Field, and Hanka (2004) test the hypothesis
that insider trading impairs market liquidity, by
analyzing intraday trades and quotes around IPO
lockup expirations in the period 1995-1999. - Complementing these studies on IPO lockup, we
examine the trading behavior of corporate
insiders following IPO lockup expiration and
investigate whether their trading activities are
an indication for subsequent long-run stock
performance.
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6Hypotheses I
- The diversification hypothesis
- This hypothesis argues that corporate
insiders simply desire to diversify their
portfolios no matter what the prospects of IPO
firms are and then they sell their IPO shares
when they are allowed to do so. If portfolio
diversification is the main reason for insider
selling following the lockup expiration, insider
selling will not have predictive power for the
subsequent long-run performance of IPOs. - ? Corporate insiders can sell their shares at
the stage of initial public offering. However,
IPOs are usually underpriced and selling a large
amount of secondary shares at IPOs sends an
unfavorable signal to potential investors (Leland
and Pyle (1977)) and may lead to the failure of
an IPO. Thus, large insider sales at IPO do not
maximize the returns of corporate insiders.
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7Hypotheses II
- The disposition effect hypothesis
- The disposition effect is one implication
extended from the prospect theory (Kahneman and
Tverskys (1979)) and labeled by Shefrin and
Statman (1985). The disposition effect
illustrates that investors have the tendency to
realize their winning investments too quickly and
hold losing investments for a longer time. Thus,
if IPOs experience run-up before the lockup
expiration, corporate insiders may sell their IPO
shares because of the disposition effect. On the
other hand, if IPOs experience negative returns
before the expiration date, insiders would hold
onto their IPO shares. If the disposition effect
is the major reason for insider selling, insider
selling will not have predictive power for the
subsequent long-run performance of IPOs.
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8Hypotheses III
- The informative selling hypothesis
- Corporate insiders have some information
about their IPO firms prospects or current
overvaluation around lockup expiration and sell
their shares knowingly to reduce their exposure
to the individual IPO firm. If this is the case,
insider selling will convey bad news and have
predictive power for the poor long-run
performance of IPOs following IPO lockups. - Tests of long-run performance would
differentiate the informative selling hypothesis
from the last two hypotheses about insider
selling. If the strong-insider-selling IPOs do
perform worse than the other IPOs in the long
run, it is more likely that the corporate
insiders, who have access to the information
about the firms true value, time the market and
sell knowingly to cash out their overvalued
shares. - Insider selling from senior corporate
insiders can help further test the informative
selling hypothesis because they have better
information than junior insiders.
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9Data and Methodology
- IPO sample are recorded in the Thomson Reuters
SDC Global New Issues database for the period
1988-2003. - To remain in the final sample, an IPO firm must
satisfy the following criteria
(1) The common stock is listed on the NYSE, AMEX,
or Nasdaq and has security returns available from
the CRSP tape. (2) The offer price must be at
least 5. (3) The security is not a REITs, ADRs,
closed-end fund, non-US stocks, reverse LBOs,
spin-offs, limited partnerships, shares of
beneficial interests, and unit offering. (4) The
firms lockup period information is available
from SDC. (5) The firm must have financial
information available from Compustat. (6) The
firm must have accounting information available
to calculate discretionary current accruals
(DCA).
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10Data and Methodology (conti.)
- We obtain insider trading data from Thomson
Reuters Insider Filing database, which contains
the trading activities of the officers and
directors of publicly traded companies. - We use all transactions by executives, officers,
directors, and controlling persons of the IPO
firms but exclude those transactions that are
duplicate, amended, inconsistent, and fewer than
100 shares as in Seyhun (1986), Lee, Mikkelson,
and Partch (1992), Lee (1997), and Clarke,
Dunbar, and Kahle (2001). - Top executives include presidents, vice
presidents, chief executive officers, board
chairs, officer-directors, chief financial
officers, and controlling persons. Other insiders
include those insiders that are not top
executives.
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11Data and Methodology (conti.)
- We trace the insider trading for two quarters
(126 trading days) after the lockup expiration. - ?Using different insider trading periods
(i.e., three-month, nine-month, and one-year
periods) does not result in any material change
in our conclusion.
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12Data and Methodology (conti.)
- We use three-year buy-and-hold returns (BHRs) to
measure the long-run stock performance of IPO
firms because they represent a feasible
investment strategy to investors. - The three-year BHRs of IPO firms are calculated
starting with two quarters following the lockup
expiration and ending on the three-year
anniversary (756 trading days) after IPO lockup
or on the delisting date of the IPO firm. - We use size and book-to-market adjusted matching
firms in our analysis.
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13Data and Methodology (conti.)
- The size and book-to-market adjusted matching
firms are neither IPO firms nor SEO firms during
the four-year period prior to two quarters
following the lockup expiration of their IPO
counterparts. - To select matching firms for each IPO firm, we
first choose the Compustat-CRSP listed firms with
the same book-to-market quintile and size decile
as that of the IPO firm. We then sort those
selected firms by their market capitalization.
The market capitalization of matching firms is
calculated on the lockup expiration day for each
IPO firm. Finally, we select the matching firm
with the closest market capitalization to the IPO
firm.
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14Sample Distribution
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15Sample Distribution (conti.)
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16Firm Characteristics
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17Insider Trading Following Lockup Expiration
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18Insider Trading Following Lockup Expiration
(conti.)
17
19The Number of Trading Days Between IPO Lockup
Expiration and the First Insider Trading
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20The Number of Trading Days Between IPO Lockup
Expiration and the First Insider Trading (conti.)
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21Long-Run Stock Performance
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22Cross-Sectional Regression
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23Cross-Sectional Regression (conti.)
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24Abnormal Insider Trading Patterns of IPO Firms
Following Lockup Expiration
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25Long-Run Stock Performance of IPO Firms by
Abnormal Insider Trading Following Lockup
Expiration
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26Regressions of Abnormal Insider Trading on the
Long-Run Stock Performance of IPO Firms
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27Cross-Sectional Regression Analysis of Abnormal
Insider Trading of IPO Firms Following Lockup
Expiration
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28Conclusion
- We find that pure insider sale IPO firms and IPO
firms with aggressive insider selling within two
quarters after lockup expiration exhibit poor
three-year stock returns following IPO lockup
expiration. - Further investigation into different groups of
insider sales shows that aggressive sales from
senior corporate insiders, such as CEOs and top
executives, do convey a negative signal for the
long-run IPO stock performance following the
lockup expiration. - Overall, the findings are consistent with the
informative selling hypothesis that high rank
corporate insiders have some information about
their IPO firms prospects or current valuation
and sell their shares knowingly to reduce their
exposure to the individual IPO firms.
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29Thank you for your attention !