You could estimate the Price to Earnings that your are paying for since you already have the ‘number of shares to be listed’ and the ‘profit attributed to owners of the company’ from the most recent financial year. PE is also a good way to know how ‘cheap’ or ‘expensive’ a stock is compared to its peers.
Like what everyone says, an alternative meaning to IPO is “It’s Probably Overvalued”, that is why we see companies going for an IPO when market is having a huge rally. Our aim is to buy something which isn’t valued at the expensive end.Just remember to cancel out extraordinary items and if the profit after tax is unstable, find away to estimate using Profit Before Tax and put in a standard corporate tax rate to derive the Profit After Tax.
5. Understanding The Business BetterSome companies have that in their prospectus and some don’t. But it is always good to know about these info.
6. What should you left out?I try to ignore this part since risk are always there. There isn’t a company that could be operating risk free. I would classify these as unforeseen circumstances but put faith in the the management to lead the company through a crisis.
Take for example, its pretty obvious that investing in an oil company would eventually face risk of commodity price decline, risk of foreign exchange and risk of probably refineries blowing up. Definitely not single person in the world wants a refinery to blow up (maybe ISIS do) and if that really happens then a well managed company could weather off this problem having a good backup plan. The business segments might be designed in a way that it isn’t too reliant on the performance of one.In conclusion, I find risk factors to be annoying and if something goes wrong, there isn’t anything that you could do to stop it. My thinking is that companies have that in their prospectus to avoid being sued in case something happens.
I believe that evaluating an IPO isn’t this simple but these are the most common things you should look at once the prospectus is in your hands. I really wish I could simplify this further into a simple checklist but similar to a business, one is different than the other.
Try to master these few things and see your valuation against the outcome of an IPO.
Happy Investing…
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Good article..before buy IPO most important to see the business mode, financial ratio compare to their peer, what the do the money our investment $ and check management expertise to run the business. Malaysian IPO only good for trading cz very speculative.
2016-05-12 20:36
chances of getting IPO shares are very low because
1) for small/mid caps, the number of shares issued to public is very very very small
2) many ppl apply for buta money because in most cases, IPO companies hire syndicate to push up the share price on listing. the last thing IPO companies want is newspaper splashing out how bad their IPO debut was
3) most ppl apply IPO not to invest but to punt for BUTA MONEY!
2016-05-13 08:53
Hiu Chee Keong
I depend on the research firm given target price, usually there will only give TP one, two day before, or even on the day IPO closed. so, normally i will wait to the last hour to decide subscribe or not, but the chance of hitting for the good share is very low, and 100% hitting rate for the rubbish shares :(
2016-05-12 19:44