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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper examines recent years and the advent of the IPO as well as its decline. Whether or not the trend will make a comeback is evaluated. The overall economy and market is discussed in depth. Some economic theory is included. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA437IPO.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
electronic boom of the 1990s. Technology stocks were the way to go, particularly on NASDAQ, but then things changed. While people would get rich with these initial lowball price offerings,
the performance of some of these stocks turned out to be lame. While people who got in on the ground floor of Yahoo for example might have done well, others
floundered with poor choices and things would take a turn for the worse. NASDAQ has been criticized in recent years for being too heavily invested in e-business and Internet stocks.
The overabundance of technology stocks created a volatile situation as some high tech companies went out of business overnight. Many investors made a bundle on NASDAQ but by the time
that the 1990s were over, one can say that many people also lost their shirts. During the latter part of the 1990s, it is also true that the IPO had
been a legitimate way to invest in the market. It was the hot commodity, but soon afterwards, things would change. There was an IPO slowdown on Wall Street and when
the bear market arrived early in March of 2000, that would have a substantial effect. What happened exactly? Marsan (2000) explains it this way: "...continued stock market volatility could signal
an IPO slowdown. The unprecedented volatility of high-tech stocks last week sent shivers through the investment community. But Wall Street watchers say companies involved in the Internets infrastructure -
network equipment vendors and service providers - are among the best-positioned to weather these market storms" (p.10). During April of 2000, this analyst was somewhat optimistic but could also
see the handwriting on the wall. The good times were over. Things were changing and the new IPO opportunity would fade. What causes this to occur is somewhat obvious. The
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