IPOScoop.com
Mission Statement
IPOScoop’s mission is to separate the worthwhile IPOs from the duds using a rating system ranging from a low of 1-Star to a high of 5-Stars.
About IPOScoop.com
IPOScoop.com LLC is an independent research firm predicting IPOs’ opening-day performances. We survey Wall Street for input on how an IPO might perform during its opening-day’s trading. We publish the consensus opinion in our SCOOP ratings, which has a 15-year accuracy rate of about 89 percent.
(Note: The SCOOP in IPOScoop.com is an acronym for Wall Street Consensus of Opening-day Premiums.)
IPOScoop.com, which made its online debut in 2006, traces its origin back 22 years to the NYSE member firm Lynch Jones & Ryan and an association with Bloomberg (1993-1996), Thomson Financial (1996-1999), Redherring.com (1999-2000) and IPODesktop.com (2000-2006). Included among our past and present subscribers are Ernst & Young (subscribing to Thomson’s “IPO Reporter”), bulge-bracket, major and regional investment bankers, foreign banks, investment advisory firms, hedge funds and individual investors, many of whom are discount brokers’ clients. E*Trade even posted our IPO calendar (then Redherring.com's "IPO Street Poll") on its Website.
John E. Fitzgibbon, Jr.
Founder of IPO SCOOP
John E. Fitzgibbon, Jr. has been following the IPO market since 1973 as an investment banker, as an analyst and as a journalist.
He was an editor at IPODesktop.com, IPO.COM, 123jump.com,WFNUSA.com, The IPO Reporter, The IPO Aftermarket and was IPO Analyst at Redherring.com. He has been a Contributing Editor to Red Herring, Investment Dealers’ Digest, Traders’ Monthly and Financial Planning magazines.
In June 1993, Mr. Fitzgibbon founded The IPO Aftermarket. After being bought by Securities Data Publishing (now Thomson Media - a Thomson Financial company) in 1995, the newsletter was merged into The IPO Reporter in January 1998. The IPO Reporter was a weekly newsletter that offered coverage of the IPO market until being folded in 2002.
Mr. Fitzgibbon was the co-host of a nationally syndicated weekly radio show, “The IPO Show,” broadcast by BusinessTalkRadio.net from 1994 to 2001. He has been widely quoted by The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones Newswire, The New York Times, Barron’s, Reuters, Bridge, Financial Times, CNNfn.com, Bloomberg Business News and others. Additionally, he has made numerous television appearances on CNNfn, CNBC, “The Nightly Business Report,” Dow Jones Investor Network and WEBFN.
In 1998 (the only year the survey was done), CBS MarketWatch recognized Mr. Fitzgibbon as “Best of Wall Street” for his IPO coverage. He was the only journalist to be profiled in a weeklong series of Wall Street research analysts.
He is the author of “Deceitful Practices: Nomura Securities and the Japanese Invasion of Wall Street” published by Birch Lane Press in 1991. In 2002, the book was published in the Czech Republic.
Mr. Fitzgibbon held several Wall Street registrations, including Series 7, 8, 24 and 63, and was a Senior Vice President and Syndicate Manager/Chief Trader at Sanyo Securities America (ceased operations in 1997) in New York City. Prior to that, he was a Vice President at Nomura Securities International. Mr. Fitzgibbon has worked in sales, research and branch office management for various brokerage firms, including Merrill Lynch (now BofA Merrill Lynch) and Harris Upham (now Morgan Stanley Smith Barney).
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