Received an excellent comment on the previous posting from MH Fong:
Agree with your assessment, specifically on the moral hazard element of it.
There is no good reason for Astro to bail out its staff who, in this case, must
be treated as ordinary shareholders.
If they do want to compensate them
for the decline in share price, they must do the same for all shareholders, e.g.
capital repayment, special dividend, etc. (And no, I swear I'm not an Astro
shareholder).
Furthermore, I personally have issues with companies
allotting IPO shares to employees; if you really want your staff to benefit,
give them options instead, which at least gives them some protection from the
swing in the market.
I don't think there should be a witch-hunt about
who's selling down though. I disagree with positions that suggest that market
volatility is a bad thing especially in a market like Bursa that is often
criticised for its poor velocity.
Two things come to mine about Astro:
It was overvalued and investors suspect that much and two, Astro decided against
a Greenshoe, which is fairly common for IPOs of this size. I think it was a bad
decision (a bad bet, if you will) rather than anything conspiratorial to forego
the Greenshoe.
Finally, one last comment on the giant IPOs pushed
through this year. I suspect that the decline in Astro's share price is
indicative of a a new element of uncertainty creeping into share trends
post-IPO, even for blue chips. And here's where I'll throw in a shameless plug
for Nate Silver's brilliant book, The Signal and The Noise. Great stuff about
predictability.
The book can be found on Amazon's website. I am afraid I have not yet read the book, although it is very much in my alley, making predictions and putting my money where my money is, is basically what I do.
Nate Silver's blog FiveThirtyEight became rather famous when it predicted the latest US elections accurately.
Where is the "Malaysian Nate Silver" predicting the coming elections, both overall and per state .....?
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