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Hedge Funds as Investors of Last Resort?

David J. Brophy1,2; Paige P. Ouimet3; Clemens Sialm4

1 University of Michigan–Ann Arbor · 2 Ross School · 3 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · 4 National Bureau of Economic Research

Review of Financial Studies 2009 open access

Hedge funds have become important investors in public companies raising equity privately. Hedge funds tend to finance companies that have poor fundamentals and pronounced information asymmetries. To compensate for these shortcomings, hedge funds protect themselves by requiring substantial discounts, negotiating repricing rights, and entering into short positions of the underlying stocks. We find that companies that obtain financing from hedge funds significantly underperform companies that obtain financing from other investors during the following two years. We argue that hedge funds are investors of last resort and provide funding for companies that are otherwise constrained from raising equity capital. (JELG14, G23, G32) Hedge funds have recently become an important source of funding for pub-lic companies raising equity privately. Financing young companies with severe information asymmetries is an important investment strategy for some hedge funds. Since 1995, hedge funds have participated in more than 50 % of the private placements of equity securities and have contributed

DOI
10.1093/rfs/hhl045
Volume
22 (2)
Pages
541-574
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
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