2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-5957.2009.02144.x
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The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs

Abstract: Prior research shows that accounting information is relevant for stock valuation, failure prediction, performance evaluation, optimal contracting, and other decision-making contexts in relatively stable market settings. By contrast, accounting's role during stock market bubbles such as those involving a revolutionary emerging technology is the subject of considerable debate, and prominent market observers have alleged that outdated and flawed accounting practices contributed to the crash of the Internet-led hi… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Lagged financial statement variables are also included, as financial accounting information is informative and relevant in investors’ valuation expectations, even in extreme settings, such as for Internet IPO firms during the high‐tech bubble (Bhattacharya et al, 2010). These variables are recorded in the year before the investment is made (Hand, 2005) and are taken from financial statements supplied by the National Bank of Belgium 1 .…”
Section: Analyses and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lagged financial statement variables are also included, as financial accounting information is informative and relevant in investors’ valuation expectations, even in extreme settings, such as for Internet IPO firms during the high‐tech bubble (Bhattacharya et al, 2010). These variables are recorded in the year before the investment is made (Hand, 2005) and are taken from financial statements supplied by the National Bank of Belgium 1 .…”
Section: Analyses and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It measures the activity of the IPO market at the time of a sample IPO is conducted and is defined as the average of the initial returns of the IPOs issued in the three months prior to the month of a given IPO. This measure is similar to the one used by Bhattacharya et al (2010). Ln( Age ) is the natural logarithm of the number of years from incorporation of the IPO company until the IPO; Ln( Size ) is the natural logarithm of the market capitalization of the IPO company at the IPO price in £ million; Initial return is the difference between first day closing and offer prices as a percentage of the offer price; Public float is IPO proceeds as a percentage of market capitalization; Ln( Sales ) is the natural logarithm of the sales of the IPO company averaged over the year before the IPO and the year of the IPO; Insider ownership is the percentage of insider ownership at the time of the IPO; VC Backed is a dummy variable coded one if the IPO firm is backed by venture capital or more generally, private equity and zero otherwise.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…For example, Hedge and Miller (1996), Lee et al (1996b), Efrata (2008), and Bhattacharya et al (2010) find negative relationship, whilst Keasey and Short (1992), Lee et al (1996a), Aggarwal et al (2002), Bradley and Jordan (2002), Loughran and Ritter (2004), Johnston and Roten (2015), and Dell' Acqua et al (2015) report significant positive relationship. Studies using Indonesian IPO relating to retained ownership have also been inconclusive.…”
Section: Retained Ownership and Underpricingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Larger IPO is also associated with high quality IPO and thus less risky which will lead to a lower initial return. The issue size appears to be consistently and negatively related to the degree of underpricing (Hedge and Miller 1996, Buckland and Davis 1990, Bhattacharya et al 2010, Kayani and Amjad 2011, Sahoo and Rajib 2011, Francis 2017). Gumanti (2000) also finds a negative relationship on his study of Indonesia IPOs from 1989-1996.…”
Section: Retained Ownership and Underpricingmentioning
confidence: 99%