An Empirical Investigation of the Relationship between Net Stock Issues and Returns in India
In: Management and labour studies: a quarterly journal of responsible management, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 505-515
Abstract
In this article, we focus on net stock issues which is a relatively unexplored asset pricing anomaly. We examine the relationship between net stock issues and returns in the Indian context using data for BSE 500 stocks from 1995 to 2012. The relationship between size, value and momentum attributes and stock return is confirmed, which is consistent with prior literature. We specifically find a negative relationship between net stock issues and returns after controlling for other firm characteristics, thus implying that companies with larger public offerings provide lower post-event returns. The net stock issues attribute is empirically associated with size and value characteristics. Large firms and low price to book (P/B) or relatively distressed firms tend to make bigger public offerings. While the former may do it to finance business expansion plans, the latter rely more on external financing owing to weak earnings record. Our findings are pertinent for policymakers, market practitioners and academicians. The study contributes to equity market anomaly literature for emerging markets.
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