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Venture Capital Distributions: Short-Run and Long-Run Reactions

Journal of Finance 1998 53(6), 2161-2183
Venture capital distributions, a legal form of insider trading, provides an ideal arena for examining the share price impact of transactions by informed parties. These sales, which occur after substantial run-ups in share value, generate a substantial price reaction immediately around the event. In the months after distribution, returns apparently continue to be negative. When the short- and long-run reactions are decomposed, they are consistent with the view that venture capitalists use inside information to time stock distributions: Distributions of firms brought public by lower quality underwriters and of less seasoned firms have more negative price reactions.

“Angel” financing and public policy: An overview

Journal of Banking & Finance 1998 22(6-8), 773-783
Within the past few years, public efforts have sought to encourage individual, or “angel”, investors. This article provides an overview of the motivations for these efforts. It assesses the underlying challenges that the financing of young growth firms pose, the ways that specialized financial intermediaries address them, and the rationales for public efforts to encourage angel investors. The final section raises a set of questions about the practical implementation of these efforts.

Venture Capital Distributions: Short‐Run and Long‐Run Reactions

Journal of Finance 1998 53(6), 2161-2183
Venture capital distributions, a legal form of insider trading, provides an ideal arena for examining the share price impact of transactions by informed parties. These sales, which occur after substantial run‐ups in share value, generate a substantial price reaction immediately around the event. In the months after distribution, returns apparently continue to be negative. When the short‐ and long‐run reactions are decomposed, they are consistent with the view that venture capitalists use inside information to time stock distributions: Distributions of firms brought public by lower quality underwriters and of less seasoned firms have more negative price reactions.