The underwriters and the company that issues the shares control the IPO process. They have wide latitude in allocating IPO shares. The SEC does not regulate the business decision of how IPO shares are allocated.
While smaller or individual investors are finding it easier to buy IPO shares through online brokerage firms, they may still find it difficult to buy IPO shares for a number of reasons:
The Underwriting Process
The IPOs of all but the smallest of companies are usually offered to the public through an “underwriting syndicate,” a group of underwriters who agree to purchase the shares from the issuer and then sell the shares to investors. Only a limited number of broker-dealers are invited into the syndicate as underwriters and some of them may not have individual investors as clients. Moreover, syndicate members themselves do not receive equal allocations of securities for sale to their clients.
The underwriters in consultation with the company decide on the basic terms and structure of the offering well before trading starts, including the percentage of shares going to institutions and to individual investors. Most underwriters target institutional or wealthy investors in IPO distributions. Underwriters believe that institutional and wealthy investors are better able to buy large blocks of IPO shares, assume the financial risk, and hold the investment for the long term.
Hot IPOs
When an IPO is “hot,” appealing to many investors, the demand for the securities far exceeds the supply of shares. The excess demand can only be satisfied once trading in the IPO shares begins. It is unclear how “hot” the offering will be until close to the time when the shares start trading. Since “hot” IPOs are in high demand, underwriters usually offer those shares to their most valued clients.
Underwriting firms that have a high percentage of individual investors as clients are more likely to allocate portions of IPO shares to individuals. Several online brokers offer IPOs, but these firms often have only a small allotment of shares to sell to the public. As a result, individual investors’ ability to buy these shares may be limited no matter which firm they do business with.