In This Article:
It’s gearing up to be a hot year for IPOs.
But for those looking to get in on the action, one strategist warned that investors should consider all of the risks before jumping in.
Ride-sharing company Lyft kicked things off this year when it went public on March 29, and a slew of other unicorns are anticipated to IPO this year. A unicorn is a private company that has an estimated valuation of $1 billion or more.
Lyft’s rival Uber, WeWork, Airbnb, SpaceX, Pinterest and Slack are some of the other highly-anticipated unicorn IPOs slated to happen this year, but Jason Draho, head of asset allocation at UBS, recommended looking at past IPOs and their performance patterns before deciding whether or not to participate.
According to Draho, unless investors can get an allocation during an IPO, buying it on the secondary market is a much less attractive investment. “Since 1980 the average first trading-day return is 18%, while in the six months and three years after the first day IPOs perform roughly in-line and below risk-adjusted market returns, respectively,” Draho explained.
Draho pointed to data compiled by University of Florida professor Jay Ritter. Ritter put together an IPO data set which includes 8,500 IPOs in the U.S. from 1980 to 2018. Positive first-day returns are extremely common occurrences for IPOs, according to Draho. “In the U.S., the average first-day return has been 18% over the past 40 years. There’s a wide range around this average, with some returns well in excess of 18%.” Nevertheless, Draho noted that it is also important to remember that “investment banks stabilize the share price in the secondary market to keep it from falling below the offer price on the first day.”
For those that can snag an IPO allocation, returns on the first trading day may appear super attractive. “That’s because the typical opening price already accounts for the bulk of the first-day return, about 90% on average. Thus, investors who buy at the opening should expect a minimal first-day return,” Draho said.
However, investors who purchased on opening day at closing price haven’t seen as juicy returns, especially if they hold the shares for longer than six months, according to Draho. “In an efficient stock market, a portfolio of IPO stocks shouldn’t consistently outperform the market, after controlling for differences in risk. But they also shouldn’t underperform on average, which is what they’ve done over a multi-year period,” Draho said.
Draho included six-months post-IPO as a critical period because that is generally when lock-up periods expire. Lock-up periods are when underwriters and pre-IPO shareholders are prevented from selling shares during the agreed-upon period, which is typically six months. Thus when lock-up periods expire, some amount of selling occurs and puts pressure on the stock price regardless of fundamentals, Draho pointed out. “Over the full sample period the average six-month return is about 6%, or about 2-3% excess, but from 2000 onwards both are negative. The absolute geometric average 5-year return was 11%, but the excess return fell to -2% and it was worse in the 2000-2016 period,” Draho explained.