Abstract

This study analyzes the interaction effect of short and long-run performance and insider trading with 1,099 seasoned equity offerings(SEOs) announced between 2004 and 2020. The major results of this study are as follows. First, insiders are net sellers prior to SEOs and the relationship between insider’s net purchase ratio and announcement effects is significantly positive. Second, the positive relationship holds only for net sell group, not for net buy group. Third, compared to firms in net sell group and net buy group, those in no trade group are marginal firms with worse operating performance, higher probability of delisting, smaller size, and lower return before SEOs, and lower ownership by largest shareholders. Fourth, regression analysis shows that announcement effect and long-run performance of no trade group is significantly more negative than net sell group and net buy group. To summarize, “dog that did not bark” effect exists in insider trading before SEOs and the absence of insider trades provide valuable information to the market.

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