Underpricing and long-run performance of Norwegian initial public offerings : An empirical investigation of factors that impacts short and longterm returns of Norwegian initial public offerings
Abstract
In this master's thesis, we have investigated several factors that could account for the
underpricing and long-term performance of initial public offerings in Norway. We used size,
equity beta, and a PE/VC dummy variable as explanatory factors for underpricing. We
extended the Fama-French (1992) multifactor model to account for liquidity and momentum
in the long-run performance. We also utilize both cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) and
buy-and-hold returns (BHR) for the long-run analysis.
Our findings show that PE/VC-sponsored IPOs are more underpriced, but not at a statistically
significant level. Size and risk do not impact the level of underpricing at a statistically
significant level either. In terms of long-run performance, CAR exhibits underperformance of
PE/VC-sponsored IPOs, with smaller firms underperforming to a larger extent. BHR results
vary drastically over time between PE/VC and non-sponsored firms, but this seems to be a
result of market dynamics as opposed to sponsoring. None of the risk-adjusted models return
significant alphas, but value-weighted portfolios indicate slight underperformance for PE/VCsponsored
IPOs. Covid-19 also had an influence on our results, as PE/VC-sponsored IPOs
significantly outperformed non-sponsored IPOs for a short duration. Lastly, both equally- and
value-weighted portfolios’ market exposure was influenced by the pandemic.