Welcome to Initial Public Offering Guide
Ipo Fund Article
![]()
This is a selection made from among articles on Ipo Fund. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.
Beware of Possible Initial Public Offering Scandal and Protect your Investing Career
from:
Successful investors are knowledgeable about the “ins and outs” of the market. Aside from understanding the basics that surrounds the world of business venture, successful investors are knowledgeable about the moral conduct and implications of their conduct towards their business venture. In other words, in order to succeed on a particular investment, an investor must swear before his colleagues that he will conduct his business in a morally-upright way and within fair competition.
Let us take a look on the first characteristic of a successful investor. As mentioned earlier, he must be knowledgeable about the basics of business venture. He knows what are the things he needs to do before getting into business (business plan, appropriate strategies, advertising and public relation plans, and others) and how he will act appropriately on certain circumstances (such as shortage in production, increased business risk due to debt, and bankruptcy).
Supposedly you are in the situation wherein you need additional finances to sustain the increasing growth of your business operation. Where will you get such finances? Definitely, it is not ideal to borrow additional capital through lending institutions. The profit that you can generate from expanding your business operation will just be used to pay your creditors. Instead of profit, you will end up break-even (no loss, no gain). The efforts you have given are just wasted.
So how will you act appropriately on such circumstances? A successful investor will instead resort to going public, or what you called in the finance industry as “initial public offering”.
Initial public offering or IPO refers to the first sale of a company’s common shares to the public. Its principal purpose is to raise additional capital that will be used to sustain the growing expenditures of a particular company. It typically involves several investment banks that will act as the underwriters for the whole process. The company as the issuer will draft a prospectus containing all the necessary information about the company itself (background, history, financial status, and others) and will be submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission for approval.
Once approved and the prices of the common shares are now finalized, such shares will undergo the free riding period wherein it will now be offered for sale to the public through various ways such as institutional visits and others.
Let us take a look on the second characteristic of a successful investor and then relate it to the conduct of the IPO process. If you think that scandal is just within the premises of the White House or within the legislative halls of the United States Congress, you are quite mistaken, for scandals also happens within the IPO process.
Nowadays, going public is no longer an automatic decision because of the scandals that have changed the landscape for IPO. Most of the personalities involved in such scandals turned out to be the losers now because of their immoral acts just to generate more profit out of the IPO process.
Want to know some of the corporate scandals that happened in IPO process? Take a look on the following:
• When AOL Time Warner went public in July 2002, the free riding period during the IPO process faltered, resulted to barter deals just to compensate the losses incurred, which is against the finalized price arrangements of their common shares.
• When Enron went public in October 2001, several corporate officials used illegal methods of acquiring wealth out of the IPO process by improper usage of off-the-books partnerships, bribed foreign government officials and representatives to win international contracts, and manipulated Texas and California energy markets. It resulted to the court conviction of their former corporate executives.
These are just two of several initial public offering scandals that happened during the recent years. Now, do you want to be a successful investor? If you want, then use the scandals happened as a moral lesson and do not commit the same mistakes or it will be the end of your investing career.
Ipo Fund News
Facebook IPO has many mutual-fund friends
Investors are wondering about the Facebook status of their mutual funds, meaning whether their fund has a piece of Facebook and stands to profit from the social-networking firm’s initial-public offering, ...
Read more...Facebook afterglow lights up IPO markets
(Reuters) - The excitement generated by Facebook's IPO filing rubbed off on companies listing on U.S. stock exchanges on Wednesday, with four of them seeing strong first-day gains. Caesars Entertainment Corp , one of the largest casino operators in the United States, led the gains, with its shares nearly doubling on the Nasdaq. Shares of EPAM Systems Inc , Roundy's Parent Co Inc and ChemoCentryx ...
Read more...Caesars Rises After Completing IPO Smaller Than 2010 Attempt
Caesars Entertainment Corp., the casino chain saddled with more than $22 billion in debt, rose as much as 50 percent in its trading debut after selling shares in an initial public offering a fraction of the size of its aborted 2010 effort.
Read more...Tesco’s Thai property fund in pre-marketing for IPO
The UK retailer’s Thai unit aims to raise about $450 million from the offering of a property fund, which will be the country’s biggest IPO in nearly six years.
Read more...Columbia Seligman Premium Technology Growth Fund Announces First Quarter Distribution: 9.25% Annual Rate for IPO ...
Today, Columbia Seligman Premium Technology Growth Fund, Inc. declared a first-quarter distribution, pursuant to its managed distribution policy, in the amou
Read more...MarketWatch First Take: Facebook IPO has many mutual-fund friends
Investors are wondering about the Facebook status of their mutual funds, meaning whether their fund has a piece of Facebook and stands to profit from the social-networking firm’s initial-public offering, writes Chuck Jaffe..
Read more...Caesar's IPO Shows Sharp Trading Swings On Small Float
Caesars Entertainment Corp. (CZR) IPO made wide swings in early trading Wednesday after the company sold a tiny slice of its stock to investors.
Read more...The Facebook IPO: Marketing, hypocrisy, and arrogance
There's something to be said for being a fossil when it's time to look at a phenomenon like Facebook's pending stock offering. The medium is new, the numbers are high, the buzz is huge, but it's the same old story I've seen a million times in four decades of business writing: A hot company is graciously offering the investing public a piece of its action. At a hot high price, of course.
Read more...
