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Effective information disclosure is the cornerstone of sustainable operation of the capital market. In the IPO market, whether public information in the prospectus can be fully captured by investors largely depends on the quality of valuation-relevant information. Based on Chinese prospectuses, we create five unique indicators to measure the information quality and examine the relationship between information quality and IPO underpricing. We find that high quality of information disclosure results in less underpricing because they relieve serious information asymmetry between issuing companies and investors. We provide a new method to supervise and improve the quality of non-financial information disclosure.
The main purpose of this paper is to study the empirical determinants of the underpricing of H-share initial public offerings (IPOs) during the 1993–2003 period. A special characteristic of H-shares is that they are shares of companies incorporated in China, but are also listed abroad. Our estimates indicate that the average IPO underpricing level of H-shares was about 16.8%. We find that the conventional explanations for the worldwide IPO underpricing are not adequate in explaining the underpricing level of H-shares. Some new factors that are important in explaining the underpricing phenomenon in H-shares are identified. We show that the degree of IPO underpricing is positively associated with market conditions prior to issuance. It is also negatively related to the range of the issuing prices as well as to the growth rate of historical profits. In addition, it is found that firms cross-listed in Hong Kong and America have higher underpricing levels.