Corporate Actions: Worldwide Initial Public Offerings
Prior to a new listing on a stock exchange, a company will have an initial
public offering, whereby it will offer shares to the public and/or
institutions.
It is important for the back offices of investment banks to know which
companies have declared their intentions of going public, so that they can set
up the issue in their reference databases, whilst the front office has the
possibilities of either advising on the IPO or consummating deals.
Not all companies that declare their intention of going public actually do so.
They may in the interim, be taken over, fail due diligence or not achieve the
valuation that they had hoped for.
Exchange Data International (EDI) monitors IPO’s on a Worldwide basis. EDI
uses local Stock Exchanges as its primary source of information, along with
additional secondary sources, such as International news agencies, as
confirmation.
EDI divides IPO’s into six categories namely Rumoured, Pending, New, Withdrawn, Postponed and once the event has taken place Historical.
Due to their nature "Rumoured" IPO's do not include security coding as these are pre-regulatory approval. When an IPO's is "Pending" EDI will track any security coding.
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