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Full-Text Articles in Business

Can Cognitive Error Explain The Ipo Partial Adjustment Phenomenon?, Steven D. Dolvin Mar 2016

Can Cognitive Error Explain The Ipo Partial Adjustment Phenomenon?, Steven D. Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Chapter 5 of: Klein, E. (2005). Stock exchanges, IPO's and mutual funds. New York: Nova Science Publishers.


Market Structure, Changing Incentives, And Underwriter Certification, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Market Structure, Changing Incentives, And Underwriter Certification, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Early studies find that higher quality underwriters are associated with lower underpricing; however, more recent evidence suggests the opposite relation. By controlling for influences associated with the changing market structure of the underwriter industry, I provide a potential explanation for this conflict, that is, that higher quality underwriters do certify initial public offerings, resulting in lower underpricing. However, effects associated with increasing market shares tend to offset certification benefits, particularly for issues underwritten by the largest investment banks.


Ipo Underpricing: The Owner’S Perspective, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Ipo Underpricing: The Owner’S Perspective, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Most corporate finance textbooks include a chapter on raising capital, giving particular attention to initial public offerings (IPOs). For IPOs, underpricing is defined as the percentage change from the offer price to the closing price on the first trading day. Textbooks universally treat underpricing as the indirect cost of issuance; however, this fails to account for the share issuance decision. Because owners do not typically sell all (or even most) of their shares, underpricing overstates the wealth lost by preexisting owners. I provide simple, real-life examples for instructors to use in courses such as corporate finance, entrepreneurship, or alternative investments.


The Influence Of Simulation Performance On Student Interest, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles Mar 2015

The Influence Of Simulation Performance On Student Interest, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

Previous studies examine the potential benefits of using classroom games and simulations, finding that their use generally increases knowledge and interest level. However, few (if any) of these studies examine whether performance in such simulations is relevant to these outcomes. Particularly in investments, where trading simulations are common, the performance relative to peers and the market can be objectively determined based on portfolio return. Thus, we extend the existing literature by studying the impact of portfolio performance on knowledge level and interest in the profession. We find that simulation performance has no significant influence on the students' feelings with regard …


Herding Behavior In Student Managed Investment Funds, Craig Caldwell, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Herding Behavior In Student Managed Investment Funds, Craig Caldwell, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Student Managed Investment Funds (SMIFs) have grown in number; unfortunately, there has been little research on the efficacy of these funds. We fill this gap by exploring the potential consequences of student investment management. We find that investment decisions are often impacted by herding behavior, which results in underperformance. We further examine characteristics that influence the likelihood of herding, finding that pre-existing knowledge of the company under consideration, as well as amplified time constraints, increase the probability that herding occurs. In contrast, we find that increased education, both general and targeted behavioral education, reduces the likelihood (and impact) of herding.


Business Week Board Rankings And Subsequent Stock Returns, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Business Week Board Rankings And Subsequent Stock Returns, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Recent corporate bankruptcies have placed renewed focus on the role of a firm's board of directors; therefore, I study rankings of the best and worst boards of directors as published by Business Week. Similar to prior studies examining survey data, I find that the portion of the rankings determined via investment manager survey is biased by the "halo effect." However, I also find that the rankings as a whole, and particularly the portion calculated via quantitative analysis, do provide information that can be used in a trading strategy capable of generating positive abnormal returns, thereby implying that board strength does …


The Influence Of University Financial Education On Asset Allocation, Steven Dolvin, John Gonas, Mark Pyles Mar 2015

The Influence Of University Financial Education On Asset Allocation, Steven Dolvin, John Gonas, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

Using survey data from students at three universities, we examine the influence of an Investments Analysis course on student perception of the ideal asset allocation for a retirement portfolio. Consistent with previous studies that examine financial education in the workplace, a critical outcome of university investment education is the apparent alleviation of a conservative bias that is typically prevalent among uninformed investors. This change results in an increasing willingness to take larger stock positions, which produces higher expected returns and larger portfolio betas. Most importantly, however, the net effect is more efficient portfolios, particularly for those students who begin with …


Can Venture Capitalists Tame The Wolves? An Analysis Of Fraudulent Underwriters, Ipo Characteristics, And Vc Certification, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Can Venture Capitalists Tame The Wolves? An Analysis Of Fraudulent Underwriters, Ipo Characteristics, And Vc Certification, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

A recent hit movie, The Wolf of Wall Street, highlighted the fraudulent activity of the investment bank Stratton Oakmont. Unfortunately, this was not the only such financial firm convicted of illegal behavior during the 1990s; there were at least 34 Initial Public Offering (IPO) underwriters that were the subject of SEC enforcement during this period. I examine the characteristics of IPOs underwritten by these investment banks, particularly as they compare to other IPOs. I find that IPOs underwritten by sanctioned investment banks (particularly those that were less active in the IPO market) were significantly different with respect to both firm …


Analysts Get Sad Too: The Effects Of Seasonal Affective Disorder On Stock Analysts’ Earnings Estimates, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles, Qun Wu Mar 2015

Analysts Get Sad Too: The Effects Of Seasonal Affective Disorder On Stock Analysts’ Earnings Estimates, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles, Qun Wu

Steven D. Dolvin

Previous research finds that stock analysts exhibit both optimistic and pessimistic biases in their earnings forecasts, with the net result being a consistent but declining overestimation of forecasted earnings. We extend this research by examining the potential effect of seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a documented psychological condition that produces heightened pessimism and risk aversion during the fall and winter months, on stock analysts' earnings estimates. Our results suggest that analysts are generally optimistic in their forecasts but significantly less so during SAD months. We also find this relation to be most pronounced for analysts located in northern states, who should …


The Efficacy Of Trading Based On Moving Average Indicators, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

The Efficacy Of Trading Based On Moving Average Indicators, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

The debate over market efficiency continues to rage, yet it is difficult to argue with published evidence surrounding the efficacy of momentum trading based on moving average indicators. While prior studies find that a comparison of the market price to the 200-day simple moving average provides a profitable trading strategy, such studies overlook many other popular price comparisons and calculation methodologies. Thus, I explore different trading rules, comparing strategies based on combinations of market price, 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day moving averages. In addition, I calculate moving averages using three alternative methods: simple, linear, and exponential. I find that a comparison …


Venture Capitalist Certification Of Ipos, Steven Dolvin Mar 2015

Venture Capitalist Certification Of Ipos, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

This article analyses a set of 4606 IPOs from the 1986 to 2000 period, specifically focusing on the certification effect associated with venture capital backing. It concludes that venture capitalists, particularly those of higher quality, are associated with lower issuance costs (both direct and indirect), increased upward price adjustments, and shorter lockup periods, all of which are consistent with a valuable certification role. In addition, it is found that even lower quality venture capitalists perform a certification role; however, it is specific to a set of penny stock (i.e. high information asymmetry) IPOs.


Seasonal Affective Disorder And Ipo Underpricing: Implications For Young Firms, Steven Dolvin, Stephanie Fernhaber Mar 2015

Seasonal Affective Disorder And Ipo Underpricing: Implications For Young Firms, Steven Dolvin, Stephanie Fernhaber

Steven D. Dolvin

A critical event in the life of a firm is when it undergoes an initial public offering (IPO). Drawing on the Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) literature, which evidences a psychological condition that produces heightened pessimism and risk aversion during the fall and winter months, this study focuses on understanding the potential implications of SAD for young firms. Our results confirm the influence of SAD on IPO underpricing and demonstrate that younger firms experience even higher underpricing during periods most heavily associated with SAD. However, we find that using a higher-quality underwriter or changing the share retention decision can mitigate this …


Fundamentals Of Investments, 7th Ed., Steven Dolvin, Thomas Miller Dec 2014

Fundamentals Of Investments, 7th Ed., Steven Dolvin, Thomas Miller

Steven D. Dolvin

Fundamentals of Investment, Valuation and Management Canadian Edition was written to: 1. Focus on students as investment managers, giving them information they can act on instead of concentrating on theories and research without the proper context. 2. Offer strong, consistent pedagogy, including a balanced, unified treatment of the main types of financial investments as mirrored in the investment world. 3. Organize topics in a way that makes them easy to apply--whether to a portfolio simulation or to real life--and support these topics with hands-on activities. The approach of this text reflects two central ideas. First, there is a consistent focus …


An Update On The Performance Of Actively Managed Etfs, Steven Dolvin Dec 2013

An Update On The Performance Of Actively Managed Etfs, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Actively managed ETFs are a relatively recent introduction to the investing landscape, and understanding their performance against passive funds is becoming increasingly important. Consistent with preliminary studies, I find that active funds are more volatile than their passive counterparts and do not provide an absolute return advantage. Thus, active ETFs are generally not good substitutes for existing passively managed funds. However, in contrast to prior studies, I find that performance metrics based on relative risk (e.g., Information and Treynor ratios) suggest that active funds may be good additions to existing portfolios for their diversification benefits. I also find that these …


Fundamentals Of Investments: Valuation And Management, Steven Dolvin, Bradford Jordan, Thomas Miller Dec 2011

Fundamentals Of Investments: Valuation And Management, Steven Dolvin, Bradford Jordan, Thomas Miller

Steven D. Dolvin

Note: Link is to the catalog entry in WorldCat's catalog. Please see your local librarian for assistance in borrowing this item via interlibrary loan.


Momentum Trading In Sector Etfs, Steven Dolvin, Jill Kirby Dec 2010

Momentum Trading In Sector Etfs, Steven Dolvin, Jill Kirby

Steven D. Dolvin

If markets were efficient, then strategies based on past price behavior would be essentially worthless. However, many traders follow investment plans that are designed to exploit momentum, particularly across sectors. This article examines one common, related trading rule: “There’s Always a Bull Market Somewhere.” Under this approach, investors buy (sell) past 12-month winners (losers). Prior studies find a positive abnormal return in the subsequent 12-month period following implementation of this strategy; however, no study examines the impact of such rules on the short-term trading patterns (returns and volume) of related securities. This article fills this gap, finding that ETFs representing …


Underpricing, Overhang, And The Cost Of Going Public To Preexisting Shareholders, Steven Dolvin, Bradford Jordan Jun 2010

Underpricing, Overhang, And The Cost Of Going Public To Preexisting Shareholders, Steven Dolvin, Bradford Jordan

Steven D. Dolvin

IPO underpricing has been extensively studied; however, its impact on the wealth of preexisting shareholders has not been closely examined. We address the question of whether or not periods of high underpricing adversely affect preexisting shareholders. We find that high levels of underpricing are associated with increased share retention, which effectively offsets much of the potential cost. Overall, we find that the percentage of shareholder wealth lost is surprisingly stable over time, unlike underpricing itself. We also find that many factors known to be related to underpricing are not significant determinants of the cost of going public to preexisting owners.


S&P Etfs: Arbitrage Opportunities And Market Forecasting, Steven Dolvin Dec 2009

S&P Etfs: Arbitrage Opportunities And Market Forecasting, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

The article examines the pricing differences between two S&P 500 ETFs (ticker symbols SPY and IVV) and the underlying stock index. The author finds that, on average, both ETFs trade at a premium relative to the S&P 500; however, the level of the daily premium (and, on occasion, discount) varies between the two securities, which creates the opportunity for arbitrage. Since the passage of Regulation NMS in mid-2005, the pricing differences, as expected, have declined, implying that any current/future arbitrage opportunity will be confined to periods of high market volatility, such as 2008. Beyond issues related to arbitrage, the author …


Daily Stock Returns: Momentum, Reversal, Or Both, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles Dec 2008

Daily Stock Returns: Momentum, Reversal, Or Both, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

Much attention has been given to the momentum and reversal of individual security returns; however, relatively little research has focused on any comparable effect for overall markets. In a similar fashion, many existing studies examine short-term movements over, for example, weekly or monthly periods, yet comparatively little is known about extremely short periods (e.g., returns for a single day following a significant market move). We fill these gaps, finding that returns on days subsequent to extreme downward market-wide moves (below -1%) tend to exhibit return reversal; whereas, days following large upward moves (above 1%) generally continue with the momentum, although …


Aftermarket Performance, Gross Spread, Lead Underwriter, And Price Revision, Steven Dolvin Dec 2008

Aftermarket Performance, Gross Spread, Lead Underwriter, And Price Revision, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

No abstract available. The author has four entries in this volume. Note: Link is to the catalog entry in WorldCat's catalog. Please see your local librarian for assistance in borrowing this item via interlibrary loan.


The Effect Of Resale Constraints On Abnormal Returns Of Borrowers In Syndicated Loans, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles, Perry Woodside Dec 2006

The Effect Of Resale Constraints On Abnormal Returns Of Borrowers In Syndicated Loans, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles, Perry Woodside

Steven D. Dolvin

We study the relationship between various loan characteristics and abnormal returns to client firms subsequent to commercial bank loans. Using a sample of 1,472 syndicated loans, we find that constraints on loan resale are predictive of short-run abnormal returns. Specifically, we find a negative relation between borrower consent constraints and short-run returns, while agent consent constraints actually appear to foster higher returns, particularly for issues with positive event performance. Our results are consistent with the notion that resale constraints are in place to mitigate potential financial distress, as well as to help facilitate relationships. Note: Link is to the article …


The Impact Of Bank Venture Capital On Initial Public Offerings, Steven Dolvin, Donald Mullineaux, Mark Pyles Dec 2006

The Impact Of Bank Venture Capital On Initial Public Offerings, Steven Dolvin, Donald Mullineaux, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

Studies of the role of venture capital in the IPO process generally assume that all venture capitalists are alike. We relax this assumption and focus on the role of venture capitalists affiliated with either commercial or investment banks. We find that firms backed by these bank venture capitalists experience a lower opportunity cost of going public. This result holds mainly for small issuers, suggesting that banks are superior to traditional venture capitalists in providing certification services to this segment of the market. We also find that bank venture capital-backed firms experience a less negative abnormal return at lockup expiration, which …


Ipo Long-Run Returns: A New Approach, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles Dec 2005

Ipo Long-Run Returns: A New Approach, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

The long-run underperformance of initial public offerings (IPOs) is heavily documented; however, researchers have been unable to consistently determine which IPO characteristics affect the level of underperformance. Our main contribution is to examine this relation using a unique, alternative approach that concentrates on pairs of IPOs issued on the same day, thereby avoiding many of the biases (e.g., overlapping time periods) embedded in previous studies. Over the period 1986 to 2000 we find that issues with lower initial returns, higher quality underwriters, and/or high technology status tend to have higher long-run returns. Note: Link is to the article on the …


Venture Capitalist Quality And Ipo Certification, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles Dec 2005

Venture Capitalist Quality And Ipo Certification, Steven Dolvin, Mark Pyles

Steven D. Dolvin

The opportunity cost of going public is directly related to the level of information asymmetry associated with the issuing firm. Independent third parties, such as underwriters and venture capitalists, are believed to mitigate this asymmetry through certification, thereby reducing this cost. Existing studies illustrate that higher quality underwriters provide increased certification value; however, current research is essentially mute with regard to the effect of venture capitalist quality. We fill this gap, finding that higher quality venture capitalists also provide incremental certification value relative to those of lower quality. Additionally, we suggest that the most appropriate measure of venture capitalist quality …


Penny Stock Ipos, Steven Dolvin, Daniel Bradley, John Cooney, Jr., Bradford Jordan Dec 2005

Penny Stock Ipos, Steven Dolvin, Daniel Bradley, John Cooney, Jr., Bradford Jordan

Steven D. Dolvin

We examine underpricing, long-run returns, lockup periods, and gross spreads for penny stock IPOs over the 1990-1998 period. We find that penny stock IPOs have higher initial returns than ordinary IPOs, but significantly worse long-run underperformance. We also find that penny stock IPOs have longer lockup periods and larger gross spreads. To explore the effect of potential market manipulation, we examine IPOs led by a group of underwriters that were the subject of SEC enforcement actions and/or other penalties. Penny stock issues led by these banks are particularly underpriced and underperform ordinary IPOs led by other underwriters. Note: Link is …


Do Underwriters Create Value For Issuers By Subjectively Determining Offer Prices?, Steven Dolvin Dec 2005

Do Underwriters Create Value For Issuers By Subjectively Determining Offer Prices?, Steven Dolvin

Steven D. Dolvin

Many existing theories attempt to explain initial public offering (IPO) underpricing by suggesting that underwriters purposefully set offer prices below market value. These theories implicitly assume that underwriters have perfect foresight and can, with complete accuracy, place a value on issuing firms. This chapter evaluates this assumption by comparing offer prices set by underwriters to prices from three objective, valuation-based approaches. Relative to these estimates, the offer prices chosen by underwriters result in lower levels of underpricing, suggesting that the prices underwriters select are actually value creating for issuing firms in that they reduce the opportunity cost of issuance. Within …