This study investigates the impacts of industry competition and market share on the long-run performance of firms conducting seasoned equity offerings (SEOs). These two factors are related to the "market dominance" and "expense preference" hypotheses, which suggest that dominant (low-competitive and high-market-share) firms would perform well after SEOs if they can bring their market advantages into full play and poorly if managers intend to hold more funds to expend, respectively. The results show that dominant SEO firms tend to outperform their matching firms and challenging (high-competitive and low-market-share) firms, supporting the market dominance hypothesis. This finding implies that firms with advantages in the product market can increase their competence via SEOs due to their ample resources. We contribute to the literature by showing that business risk can affect the performance following financing activities, a result that can help long-run investors select more promising SEO stocks.
机构:
Cornell Univ, Sch Hotel Adm, Ithaca, NY 14853 USAWashington State Univ, Dept Finance Insurance & Real Estate, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
Ma, Qingzhong
Whidbee, David A.
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Washington State Univ, Dept Finance Insurance & Real Estate, Pullman, WA 99164 USAWashington State Univ, Dept Finance Insurance & Real Estate, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
Whidbee, David A.
Zhang, Athena Wei
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Ithaca Coll, Dept Finance & Int Business, Sch Business, Ithaca, NY 14850 USAWashington State Univ, Dept Finance Insurance & Real Estate, Pullman, WA 99164 USA