Working Paper
Using a sample of U.S. IPOs from 2000–2019, the authors show that IPOs with at least one female director
experience significantly greater underpricing on the first trading day. The effect is not attributable to
the previously documented determinants of underpricing or other firm or director characteristics.
The underpricing effect is the strongest after 2010—when pressures were placed on firms to diversify
their boards—and the effect is mitigated in the very last years of the sample—where the authors find that
gender-diverse board IPOs realize greater offer price revisions and final offer prices, relative to nondiverse
board IPOs.
The dynamic relation between board gender diversity and IPO price formation coincides with the timing of the diversity campaigns of BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard,
suggesting that investor demand for board gender diversity was not fully incorporated into IPO offer
prices until this demand was widely publicized.
Faculty
Emeritus Professor of Finance