SOE
Chow Institute
User Center
中
EN
About WISE
People
Committee of Academic Consultants
Faculty Directory
Staff Directory
Research
Publications
Working Papers
Facilities&Centers
Education
Overview
Undergraduate Programs
Graduate Programs
Study-Abroad MA Programs
Exchange Programs
Executive Education
News & Events
News
Announcements
Conferences
Seminars & Conferences
Job Openings
SOE
Chow Institute
User Center
中
EN
About WISE
Introduction to WISE
Contact Us
Map and Direction
People
Committee of Academic Consultants
Faculty Directory
Staff Directory
Research
Publications
Working Papers
Facilities&Centers
Education
Overview
Undergraduate Programs
Graduate Programs
Study-Abroad MA Programs
Exchange Programs
Executive Education
News & Events
News
Announcements
Conferences
Seminars & Conferences
Job Openings
Research
Home
->
Research
->
Publications
->
Content
Research
Publications
Working Papers
Facilities&Centers
Finance & Economics Experimental Lab
MOE Key Lab in Econometrics
Fujian Provincial Key Lab in Statistics
Center for Econometrics Research
Center for Financial Research
Center for Research in Labor Economics
Center for Macroeconomics Research
Center for Statistics Research
Center for Information Technology
SAS Center for Excellence in Econometrics
High-Speed Computing Cluster
Self-Selectivity in Firm’s Decision to Withdraw IPO: Bayesian Inference for Hazard Models of Bankruptcy with Feedback
Id:2122
Date:20131014
Status:published
ClickTimes:
作者
Rong Chen, Re-Jin Guo, Ming Lin
正文
Examination on firm performance subsequent to a chosen event is widely used in finance studies to analyze the motivation behind managerial decisions. However, results are often subject to bias when the self-selectivity behind managerial decisions is ignored and unspecified. This study investigates a unique corporate event of initial public offering (IPO) withdrawal, where a firm's subsequent likelihood of bankruptcy is specified in a system of switching hazard models, and the expected difference in post-IPO and post-withdrawal survival probabilities serves as a "feedback" on a firm's decision to cancel its offering. Our Bayesian inference procedure generates strong evidence that incidence of withdrawal unfavorably affects subsequent performance of a firm, and that the "feedback" is an important determinant in managerial decision. The econometric and statistical model specification and the accompanying estimation procedure we used can be widely applicable to study self-selective corporate transactions.
JEL-Codes:
关键词:
TOP