Corporate Political Activities and the SEC's Oversight Role in the IPO Process
We study how a regulator (Securities and Exchanges Commission; SEC) responds to IPOs that have a higher political profile. We find that IPOs with issuers (intermediaries) that actively pursue political strategies receive more (less) SEC comment letters than IPOs without such actors. Cross‐sectional analysis reveals that the IPO's political environment moderates the relationship between social pressure for more corporate transparency and SEC scrutiny. Additional tests indicate that the political activities of issuers (intermediaries) contribute to a less (more) efficient IPO process. Overall, our findings suggest that politically active intermediaries have stronger incentives to accurately portray the IPO financial reporting environment than politically active issuers because they have greater reputational and political capital at stake; quite simply, the former have more to lose. We draw out the implications for theory, in terms of agency and reputation.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
Journal of Management StudiesISSN
0022-2380Publisher
WileyPublisher URL
External DOI
Issue
2Volume
61Page range
375-412Department affiliated with
- Accounting and Finance Publications
- Business and Management Publications
Institution
University of SussexFull text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes