Vancouver Sun

The myth of the ‘hot’ IPO Brian Madden explains why investors need to be wary of the hype and process

- Financial Post Brian Madden is a senior vicepresid­ent and portfolio manager at Goodreid Investment Counsel.

Investment lore tells us that “there’s gold in them there hills,” when it comes to initial public offerings of stocks. Surely everyone has heard stories of those fortunate enough to “get in on the ground floor” of a McDonalds, Apple or Dollarama and the countless number of times those stocks have multiplied since then. Faced with tales of eye-popping returns like these, it’s tempting to conclude that initial public offerings are a great investment opportunit­y. Reality, however, is different, and accordingl­y, our practice is to cast a wary and cautious eye toward all IPOs. Why?

The best way to answer this question is to jump directly to the conclusion: The typical IPO stock, not only doesn’t multiply 10-fold like some of the market darlings above, but in fact doesn’t even keep pace with the S&P 500 Index. Over the last decade, the Bloomberg IPO Index, which tracks the performanc­e of U.S. IPOs in their first year, has generated a total return of just 59 per cent whereas the S&P 500 has returned 105 per cent. In Canada, among the 92 initial public offerings on the TSX over the last 10 years, just 47 made gains in their first year. The typical IPO underperfo­rmed the S&P TSX Composite Index with remarkable consistenc­y, lagging the index in eight of the last 10 years, such that the typical IPO buyer incurred a loss of 3.5 per cent per year, whereas the TSX earned nine per cent in a typical year.

There are a number of factors that contribute to the dramatic and consistent underperfo­rmance of IPOs in their rookie year.

While an initial public offering may superficia­lly look just like any other trade one might execute on an exchange, it is a decidedly different beast. Unlike other trades where existing public shareholde­rs sell their shares in exchange for money from a new buyer, an IPO is either a treasury or a secondary offering. In a treasury offering, typically the company is raising money to fund growth plans and the new investor buys shares directly from the company. With a secondary offering, the company does not raise any money, but lists its shares on an exchange and the new investor buys shares from an existing shareholde­r — quite often the founders of the company, or occasional­ly from earlier stage investors like private equity or venture capital firms.

Investment bankers, for a fee ranging between three to six per cent of the value of the deal, advise the company about how to price, structure and market the offering and help create demand for the shares. Understand­ing the incentives at work here is important: in both a treasury offering and a secondary offering, the selling shareholde­r’s gain is the buying shareholde­r’s loss — it is a zero sum game. Treasury shares sold at higher prices raise more money and relinquish less voting control than shares sold lower. Secondary issues sold higher enrich the founders more so and give up less voting control than shares sold lower.

Selling shareholde­rs will always prefer a higher valuation and a higher IPO price for this very reason. Investment banks also compete aggressive­ly among themselves to win an IPO mandate, since the fees can be very lucrative for a large IPO. Often, the winning investment bank is the one whose pitch to the company’s board makes the most aggressive valuation case for the shares to be issued. Systematic over-pricing of IPOs is the norm in light of these direct and large incentives.

A further peril to an IPO investor is the risk of informatio­n asymmetry: the risk of dealing with a counterpar­ty who is better informed about the value of the asset than the buyer. Anyone who has ever bought a used car will understand this — the casual car buyer kicks the tires and maybe hires a mechanic to give the car a cursory inspection, but won’t even approach the deep understand­ing of the car’s value and condition that the seller has. The question IPO investors ought to ask themselves is: “If the expert insiders think now is such an opportune time to sell, what is it that I know that they don’t that makes me so confident now is an opportune time to buy?”

Once issued, a new IPO undergoes a seasoning period in the public markets. This is a multi-quarter time frame where price discovery occurs under less contrived conditions compared with the IPO process. During this time, brokerage analysts initiate research on the stock and publish target prices, which usually validate the IPO price and suggest further opportunit­y for gains in the stock. Investors should be wary about the objectivit­y in these reports though, as some will be published by the same investment banks who managed the IPO, who will accordingl­y be extremely reticent to cast their big fee paying corporate client in a negative light with a downbeat initial research report.

Establishi­ng management credibilit­y in setting and achieving various operating and financial goals is another important part of the seasoning period. All too often during the IPO process overzealou­s management teams set very lofty goals for the company, which they are then unable to achieve. In one notable IPO early this year the management team laid out plans to open more than 550 new retail locations over the next three years, even though it had managed to open just 275 stores cumulative­ly since its inception in 2005. Not surprising­ly, reality set in, and the company was later forced to talk down these hyperbolic hopes and sure enough, this has been one of the worst IPOs of the year, with the stock down 49 per cent.

The final caution in buying an IPO is the most insidious one: adverse selection, whereby a retail investor will get as many shares of a lousy company as they request on its IPO, but very few or none at all in a good IPO. This isn’t supposed to happen, but it does. Investment bankers managing the IPO are supposed to treat all investors fairly. In practice however, the little old lady in Lethbridge with the $120,000 discount brokerage account buying 100 shares is totally overmatche­d by powerful pension funds, mutual funds and hedge funds who may not be shy about throwing their weight around and advocating for more than their fair share of “hot” IPOs.

While this missive might sound sombre, or even jaded, we believe that success in investing hinges just as much on avoiding loss as it does on picking winning investment­s. We won’t poison the well so far as to say that all IPOs should be shunned, but certainly they do deserve a healthy dose of skepticism because the deck of cards is heavily and systematic­ally stacked against new buyers, despite the selective memories of those who spin tales of tantalizin­gly big wins on new issues.

 ?? MICHAEL NAGLE/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Investors should approach initial public offerings with caution as most, in reality, won’t benefit from eye-popping profits like those lucky enough to invest in Apple, says Brian Madden.
MICHAEL NAGLE/GETTY IMAGES FILES Investors should approach initial public offerings with caution as most, in reality, won’t benefit from eye-popping profits like those lucky enough to invest in Apple, says Brian Madden.

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