"Risk happens fast." This is a phrase I learned in trading and investing quite some time ago, and it holds true. Accidents don’t unfold slowly. The story generally goes like this: One moment everything is fine, and in an instant, everything changes. A risk presents itself with immediate ramifications. It's fascinating that even known risks can manifest rapidly when they do appear.
In popular culture, people often discuss the housing bubble of the early 2000s and the resulting financial collapse of 2008 as if no one saw it coming. That’s simply not true—warnings were issued for years. But when the crisis hit, it hit fast.
However, there's another kind of risk—the risk we fail to take, which leads to missed opportunities. On a smaller scale, this phenomenon of “fast risk” applies to trading in IPO stocks in both respects. Having acutely focused on new issues for many years now, I have seen both situations arise countless times. A company goes through the underwriting process, issues their stock to new investors, and opens at a premium of, say, 50%, only to trade to eye-popping heights from there. I have also seen the reverse happen, where a company issues shares, opens with the same 50% premium, and then immediately crashes lower in the first hours or even minutes of trading. Risk happens fast.
Adding to the complexity of these situations is that traditional approaches to informing decisions, such as relative valuation or technical analysis, leave much to be desired. Often, new issues that subsequently perform well open at valuations much higher than their peers. Technical analysis requires some price and volume history to apply this methodology, so while calamities may be avoided by waiting for information, opportunities are also missed.
In an effort to inform our decisions at IPO Prophet using alternative methods, we analyze the first day of new issue trading as events. By doing so, we find differences in price behavior. The following charts illustrate how both types of risk do indeed happen fast. The first minutes of trading are markedly different for extreme winners and extreme losers in comparison to the price behavior of typical new issues.
Both charts analyze the percentage change in price on a one-minute basis relative to the open price. The groups of stocks are broken into a sample of outliers versus the rest of the securities in our database. We compute the average percent change at each minute with their accompanying standard deviations. The shaded areas represent plus or minus one standard deviation from the respective means. The idea is that the further an individual stock moves in price away from the sample group, the more likely it is that the stock is indeed on a vastly different trajectory. This group of outliers is constructed of new issues that had the greatest positive or negative change in price relative to the open price. So in this analysis we are analyzing the rate at which the price is changing.
The first chart analyzes our first scenario, where we are looking at securities that have opened and quickly ascended in price.
Key Observations:
Specific Points of Interest:
The second chart evaluates those that quickly decline.
Key Observations:
Specific Points of Interest:
In both scenarios the charts illustrate just how quickly volatile IPO securities move. Each sample group moved in excess of 10% in the first 20 minutes of trading. The risk of missed opportunity or quick loss is very apparent. At IPO Prophet we seek to develop systems to address these risks in a systematic way. In knowing what downside risks can be and recognizing when trading action looks quantifiably adverse, it becomes easier to step in to seize opportunity.