An Efficient Market? Going Public in London, 1891-1911
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2018-09-11Metadata
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Fjesme S, Galpin N, Moore. An Efficient Market? Going Public in London, 1891-1911. The Economic History Review. 2018 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ehr.12783Abstract
There have been claims that British capital was not well deployed in Victorian Britain. There
was, allegedly, a lack of support for new and dynamic companies in comparison to the
situation in Germany and the United States. We find no evidence to support these claims. The
London Stock Exchange welcomed young, old, domestic and foreign firms. It provided funds
to firms in old, existing industries as well as patenting firms in “new-tech” industries at
similar costs of capital. If investors did show a preference for older and foreign firms it was
because those firms offered investors better long-run performance. In addition, we show
some evidence that investors who worked in the same industry and lived close to the firm
going public were allotted more shares in high-quality initial public offerings (IPOs).