Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms

This study investigates whether patents can be a useful signaling tool for the IPO performances among high- and low-tech firms. Literature has provided a wealth of evidence confirming a significant relationship between patent signal and capital-raising success for US and EU venture capital-backed fi...

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Published in:Economies
Main Author: An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85153783112&doi=10.3390%2feconomies11040101&partnerID=40&md5=30d5b5f9ef3a65dc26a3eea58cb54a97
id 2-s2.0-85153783112
spelling 2-s2.0-85153783112
An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
2023
Economies
11
4
10.3390/economies11040101
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85153783112&doi=10.3390%2feconomies11040101&partnerID=40&md5=30d5b5f9ef3a65dc26a3eea58cb54a97
This study investigates whether patents can be a useful signaling tool for the IPO performances among high- and low-tech firms. Literature has provided a wealth of evidence confirming a significant relationship between patent signal and capital-raising success for US and EU venture capital-backed firms and start-ups in specific industries. Therefore, this paper focuses on the IPO firms from a more risk-averse market, Japan, to fill in the gaps in the literature, examining the signaling effect of patent applications prior to initial public offering (IPO) to the amount raised at IPO. Moreover, we examine whether patent applications prior to IPO from high-tech have relatively weaker signaling effects to compare with low-tech IPOs. Using the OLS model for 338 Japanese IPOs listed between 2000 and 2015, the result shows a robust and positive association between the number of patents before an IPO and the amount of cash raised during the IPO. The finding confirms that patents are a reliable signal for IPOs in the Japanese context. Using OECD industry categorization to classify high-tech and low-tech IPOs, our OLS result found that the interaction impact between the high-tech dummy and the quantity of patent applications before IPO is significantly negative to the amount of cash generated at IPO. The findings hold for a new set of high-tech and low-tech firms when we used a new industrial categorization proposed by Thomson Reuters, leading us to conclude that for the Japanese companies that belong to the high-tech industry sector, patenting activities fail to have a positive signal for the IPO. © 2023 by the authors.
MDPI
22277099
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
spellingShingle An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
author_facet An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
author_sort An L.T.N.; Matsuura Y.; Tareq M.A.; Issa N.M.; Che-Yahya N.
title Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
title_short Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
title_full Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
title_fullStr Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
title_sort Impact of Patent Signal on Firm’s Performance at IPO: An Empirical Analysis of Japanese Firms
publishDate 2023
container_title Economies
container_volume 11
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.3390/economies11040101
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85153783112&doi=10.3390%2feconomies11040101&partnerID=40&md5=30d5b5f9ef3a65dc26a3eea58cb54a97
description This study investigates whether patents can be a useful signaling tool for the IPO performances among high- and low-tech firms. Literature has provided a wealth of evidence confirming a significant relationship between patent signal and capital-raising success for US and EU venture capital-backed firms and start-ups in specific industries. Therefore, this paper focuses on the IPO firms from a more risk-averse market, Japan, to fill in the gaps in the literature, examining the signaling effect of patent applications prior to initial public offering (IPO) to the amount raised at IPO. Moreover, we examine whether patent applications prior to IPO from high-tech have relatively weaker signaling effects to compare with low-tech IPOs. Using the OLS model for 338 Japanese IPOs listed between 2000 and 2015, the result shows a robust and positive association between the number of patents before an IPO and the amount of cash raised during the IPO. The finding confirms that patents are a reliable signal for IPOs in the Japanese context. Using OECD industry categorization to classify high-tech and low-tech IPOs, our OLS result found that the interaction impact between the high-tech dummy and the quantity of patent applications before IPO is significantly negative to the amount of cash generated at IPO. The findings hold for a new set of high-tech and low-tech firms when we used a new industrial categorization proposed by Thomson Reuters, leading us to conclude that for the Japanese companies that belong to the high-tech industry sector, patenting activities fail to have a positive signal for the IPO. © 2023 by the authors.
publisher MDPI
issn 22277099
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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