Abstract:
This study analyses the long-run performance of 34 Sri Lankan Initial Public Offerings listed
during 2000 – 2014 and focuses on the changes in risk-return characteristic since there is only
handful of prior investigates regarding the impact of civil war on IPO risk-return changes
relatively to developed markets. The first objective is to provide evidence on long-run
underperformance or over performance. Hence, IPOs underperformed the benchmark in the
long-run subject to Event-time Approach. The second objective is detecting the changes in the
performance of IPOs relatively to Market-adjusted-Average Cumulative Abnormal Returns
and Buy-and-Hold Abnormal Returns. Thirdly, the analysis discusses how risk-return
characteristics differ between two IPO samples. Post-war IPOs appear to be less risky while
pre-war IPOs revealing higher risky and subject to non-systematic risk in the long-run, yet with
same magnitude of returns. Authors believe that investors can use this information to identify
profitable strategies to overcome long-run underperformance