Review of Corporate Finance > Vol 5 > Issue 3–4

Information Production by Institutions and Information Extraction by Underwriters in Hybrid IPO Auctions

Thomas J. Chemmanur, Carroll School of Management, Boston College, USA, chemmanu@bc.edu , Pengfei Ma, Lee Kong Chian School of Business, Singapore Management University, Singapore, pengfeima@smu.edu.sg , Chaopeng Wu, Department of Finance, School of Management, Xiamen University, China, wuchaopeng@xmu.edu.cn , Qianqian Yu, College of Business, Lehigh University, USA, qiy617@lehigh.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Thomas J. Chemmanur, Pengfei Ma, Chaopeng Wu and Qianqian Yu (2025), "Information Production by Institutions and Information Extraction by Underwriters in Hybrid IPO Auctions", Review of Corporate Finance: Vol. 5: No. 3–4, pp 291-348. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/114.00000076

Publication Date: 14 Jul 2025
© 2025 T. J. Chemmanur, P. Ma, C. Wu and Q. Yu
 
Subjects
Finance,  Corporate finance,  Financial markets
 
Keywords
JEL Codes: G24, G23, M41
Information productionHybrid IPO auctionsInitial public offeringsForeign versus domestic institutional investorsIPO mechanism reform in developing countries
 

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In this article:
Introduction 
Relation to the Existing Literature and Contribution 
Theory and Hypothesis Development 
Data, Sample Selection, and Construction of Variables 
Empirical Tests and Results 
Robustness Tests: Ruling Out Alternative Explanations 
Policy Implications, Limitation, and Conclusion 
Appendix A: Institutional Details of the IPO Share Offering Mechanism in China 
References 

Abstract

We analyze the informational properties of hybrid IPO auctions using a large and unique database of institutional bids from Chinese IPO auctions. We find strong evidence of information production by institutions about the intrinsic values of IPO firms and of underwriters extracting and using this information in IPO pricing. The IPO offer price is more sensitive to bids from institutions able to produce more precise information. In particular, the offer price is more sensitive to bids from domestic institutions, compared to bids from foreign institutions who likely have less knowledge or experience about Chinese firms and the Chinese financial market due to geographic, legal, and cultural distances. Institutional bidding information also has predictive power for IPO initial returns and long-run post-IPO stock returns. Finally, institutions are compensated for their information production: institutions able to produce more precise information get significantly larger allocations in better performing IPOs; this difference in IPO allocations between better and worse performing IPOs is greater for institutions able to produce more precise information. Overall, “dirty” uniform price hybrid IPO auctions appear to be a reasonably effective alternative to the traditional book-building IPO mechanism, so that our analysis has important implications for IPO mechanism reform in developing countries.

DOI:10.1561/114.00000076

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Review of Corporate Finance, Volume 5, Issue 3–4 Special Issue on Initial Public Offerings: Articles Overview
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