The Role of the Value Added by the Venture Capitalists in Timing and Extent of IPOs
- Topics:
- Credit Management
- Tags:
- Center For Financial Studies,
- Finance,
- Financing,
- Financing Period,
- Financing Startups,
- Investment,
- IPO,
- Venture Capital
- Source:
- Center for Financial Studies
FREE Registration is required
Overview: The article says that a venture capitalist may decide to take a company public or to liquidate it after one or two financing periods. A longer venture capitalist's participation in a firm (later IPO) may increase its value while also increasing costs for the venture capitalist. Due to his active involvement, the venture capitalist knows the type of firm and the kind of project he finances before potential new investors do. This information asymmetry is resolved at the end of the second period. Under certain assumptions about the parameters and the structure of the model, we obtain a single equilibrium in which high-quality firms separate from low-quality firms. The latter are liquidated after the first period, while the former go public either after having been financed by the venture capitalist for two periods or after one financing period using a lock-up. Whether a strategy of one or two financing periods is chosen depends on the consulting intensity of the project and / or on the experience of the venture capitalist. In the separating equilibrium, the offer price corresponds to the true value of the firm.
(Is this item miscategorized? Does it need more tags? Let us know.)
Format: PDF | Size: 681KB | Date: Jul 2003 | Pages: 27
People who downloaded this item also downloaded
![]() |
Venture Capital Investments by IPO Underwriters: Certification or Conflict of Interest? |




