The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

IPOs expected to rebound after dip in ’16

Reports show optimism despite uncertaint­ies.

- By Mike Freeman San Diego Union-Tribune

Fewer companies went public in 2016 than in any year since the 2008-09 financial crisis, as a series of stock market hiccups from “Brexit” to the U.S. presidenti­al election cooled demand for initial public stock offerings.

But the coming year could make up for 2016 malaise, as the pipeline of companies looking to go public is well stocked with IPO candidates.

Two reports out this month — Ernst & Young’s Global IPO Trends study and Renaissanc­e Capital’s U.S. IPO Market Annual Review — are optimistic about a rebound in companies going public, despite lingering uncertaint­y around the European Union, the new U.S. administra­tion and China’s growth prospects.

“The most important catalyst for an IPO is how the existing ones have done,” said Kathleen Smith, principal at Renaissanc­e Capital, a Maryland-based manager of IPO-focused Exchange Traded Funds. “The returns are such that there is nothing in the way. Companies should be filing right and left when we return from the holidays.”

Based on Renaissanc­e’s data, the average stock price increase for 2016 IPO companies on U.S. exchanges is 22.5 percent. Its Private Company Watchlist contains 277 companies likely to go public in the next 12 to 24 months.

“I think we’ll see 2017 being a lot better than 2016 now that there is some stability, at least in the U.S.,” said Tim Holl, a San Diego partner with Ernst & Young. “The election is behind us. There is obviously some momentum in the market. So there is an expectatio­n that 2017 is going to be better.”

The numbers vary slightly between the Ernst & Young and Renaissanc­e Capital reports, but the trends are similar.

Ernst & Young reported 112 companies raised $21.3 billion in IPOs this year in the U.S., down more than 35 percent from the prior year.

Renaissanc­e pegged the number of IPOs at 105, with $18.8 billion raised. That’s down from 170 companies raising $30 billion a year earlier.

A steep stock market selloff early last year froze out potential IPO companies in the first quarter. In June, Brexit — the British referendum to exit the European Union — shook up investors again. Finally, the U.S. presidenti­al election whipsawed markets.

Many companies that did go public in 2016 did so at a discount, said Smith of Renaissanc­e Capital. They lowered their proposed prospectus stock price range prior to their IPOs, or they priced shares below publicly traded peers.

“Once private companies saw that, they were thinking maybe we should wait a little longer,” she said. “There has been a lot of private capital that has been able to sustain these private companies longer than normal.”

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