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Higher Grades, Better Performance: Debunking Myths Associated with IPOs


Affiliations
1 Assistant Professor (Grade III) and Area Chairperson, Department of Economics, Amity Business School, Amity University, Sector 125, Gautam Buddha Nagar, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India
2 Relationship Manager, Emerging Corporate Group, IndusInd Bank Ltd., Surat - 395001, Gujarat, India

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May 1, 2007 marked the day when a distinctive mandatory system prevalent nowhere in the world was introduced by India's market regulator SEBI - mandatory initial public offering (IPO) grading. It was for the first time in the history of securities market regulator that a company planning to get listed needed to get a grading of its issue. The rationale behind the mandatory grading was that the retail investors who are usually at a disadvantage of having inadequate information about the issue would get an indication about the fundamentals of the company. The belief that "Higher Grades lead to better IPO performance both in the pre and post listing period" has been proved to be a myth over and over again. Lately, there has been a debate over the significance and relevance of IPO Grading. Out of the total 56 public issues that were launched and listed on the NSE during the one year period from January - December 2010, 42 issues traded at a loss after one year of listing as compared to their issue price. This paper analyses the myths surrounding the IPO Grades and their performance.

Keywords

CRA, IPO, IPO, Grades, Retail Investors, High Grades, Low Grades

G12, G24, G32

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  • Higher Grades, Better Performance: Debunking Myths Associated with IPOs

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Authors

Shalini Trivedi
Assistant Professor (Grade III) and Area Chairperson, Department of Economics, Amity Business School, Amity University, Sector 125, Gautam Buddha Nagar, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India
Bhavarth Sheth
Relationship Manager, Emerging Corporate Group, IndusInd Bank Ltd., Surat - 395001, Gujarat, India

Abstract


May 1, 2007 marked the day when a distinctive mandatory system prevalent nowhere in the world was introduced by India's market regulator SEBI - mandatory initial public offering (IPO) grading. It was for the first time in the history of securities market regulator that a company planning to get listed needed to get a grading of its issue. The rationale behind the mandatory grading was that the retail investors who are usually at a disadvantage of having inadequate information about the issue would get an indication about the fundamentals of the company. The belief that "Higher Grades lead to better IPO performance both in the pre and post listing period" has been proved to be a myth over and over again. Lately, there has been a debate over the significance and relevance of IPO Grading. Out of the total 56 public issues that were launched and listed on the NSE during the one year period from January - December 2010, 42 issues traded at a loss after one year of listing as compared to their issue price. This paper analyses the myths surrounding the IPO Grades and their performance.

Keywords


CRA, IPO, IPO, Grades, Retail Investors, High Grades, Low Grades

G12, G24, G32