187x Filetype PPTX File size 0.09 MB Source: mahasiswa.yai.ac.id
ABSTRACT the Lehman collapse affected industrial firms that received underwriting, advisory, analyst, and market-making services from Lehman. Equity underwriting clients experienced an abnormal return of around –5%, on average, in the 7 days surrounding Lehman’s bankruptcy, amounting to $23 billion in aggregate risk- adjusted losses. Losses were especially severe for companies that had stronger and broader security underwriting relationships with Lehman or were smaller, younger, and more financially constrained. Other client groups were not adversely affected. I. Background A. Firm–Investment Bank Relationships The extant theoretical and empirical literature has examined ways in which a long-term equity underwriting relationship between an investment bank and a 238 The Journal of FinanceR client firm can create value for both parties. The first such channel is economies of scale. B. Empirical Implications Equity underwriting relationships (especially relationships with high reputation underwriters) appear to be potentially valuable to client firms because of equity clients (1) being able to share the benefit of an underwriter’s investment in information generation via reduced fees for subsequent equity offerings and (2) having the ability to benefit from underwriter monitoring and the underwriter’s investment in a network of institutional investors, who provide information and also subscribe to the underwriter’s offerings. II. Data and Methodology A. Equity Underwriting We use the Securities Data Corporation (SDC) Global New Issues database to identify firms that employed Lehman Brothers as the lead or co-lead underwriter on a public offering of common stock in the U.S. market during the 10 years preceding Lehman’s bankruptcy (September 14, 1998, to September 14, 2008). B. Debt Underwriting, M&A Advising, Market Making, and Analyst Coverage In addition to equity underwriting, we also examine the effect of Lehman’s collapse on firms that received other services from Lehman, including debt underwriting, M&A advising, market making, and analyst coverage. C. Measures of Investment Bank–Client Relationship Strength and Client Characteristics This subsection describes measures of the strength of a client’s relationship to Lehman and other client characteristics that we use as independent variables in our cross-sectional regressions pertaining to equity underwriting clients D. Estimating Abnormal Returns Ri,t = αi + βi RM,t + siSMBt + hiHMLt + uiUMDt + εi,t, III. Results A. The Collapse of Lehman Brothers Table I documents the significant events surrounding the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and Lehman’s stock price performance. On Sunday evening, September 14, 2008, Lehman announced that it would file for protection in U.S. bankruptcy court. The following day (Day 0), Lehman’s shareholders experienced a raw return of –94%, which came on the heels of significant losses during the week before the bankruptcy announcement (September 8 to September 12; Days –5 to –1).
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