Corporate Resilience Against the COVID-19 Crisis: How Valuable is an Islamic Label?

被引:0
|
作者
Al Mamun, Mohammed Abdullah [1 ]
Rahman, Md Lutfur [2 ]
Haque, Md Reiazul [3 ]
机构
[1] Australian Natl Univ, ANU Coll Business & Econ, Canberra, Australia
[2] Univ Newcastle, Newcastle Business Sch, Callaghan, Australia
[3] Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart Univ, Sch Business & Qual Management, Dubai, U Arab Emirates
关键词
abnormal return; COVID-19; Islamic label; operating performance; volatility; FIRM PERFORMANCE; SOCIAL-RESPONSIBILITY; RISK-FACTOR; GOVERNANCE; VOLATILITY; LOYALTY; FINANCE; IMPACT; INVESTORS; RETURNS;
D O I
10.1111/jbfa.12865
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
The COVID-19 pandemic provides a novel setting to explore whether an Islamic label benefits firms during a crisis. The existing literature mostly explores the differential performance between Islamic and conventional equity markets at the aggregate level without controlling for idiosyncratic firm characteristics. Using the cross-sectional and difference-in-differences (DiD) regressions, we provide novel evidence at the firm level on how market segmentation based on investors' religious or ethical preferences significantly affects how firms withstand a crisis. Segregating S&P1500 companies into Islamic and non-Islamic, we show that an Islamic label has a significantly positive (negative) impact on abnormal returns and operating performance (volatility). Specifically, S&P1500 Islamic firms generate an extra daily return of 0.64% and exhibit 1.2% lower daily volatility than their non-Islamic counterparts. Although researchers report firms' environmental and social (ES) performance as a resilience factor during the COVID-19 crisis, we observe that the ES score does not offer explanatory power when we control firm-level financial variables. In contrast, the Islamic label remains a statistically and economically significant positive determinant of pandemic period returns and operating performance. Our key findings are robust in (i) the cross-sectional and DiD regressions; (ii) alternative definitions of abnormal returns, volatility, and operating performance; (iii) the propensity score-matched samples; and (iv) S&P500 Islamic and non-Islamic subsamples.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Modeling the Resilience of the Cryptocurrency Market to COVID-19
    Naimy, Viviane
    Haddad, Omar
    El Khoury, Rim
    BUSINESS INFORMATION SYSTEMS WORKSHOPS, BIS 2021, 2022, 444 : 347 - 358
  • [12] The resilience of the cooperative model: How do cooperatives deal with the COVID-19 crisis?
    Billiet, Adrien
    Dufays, Frederic
    Friedel, Stefanie
    Staessens, Matthias
    STRATEGIC CHANGE-BRIEFINGS IN ENTREPRENEURIAL FINANCE, 2021, 30 (02): : 99 - 108
  • [13] Did Corporate Social Responsibility Vaccinate Corporations Against COVID-19?
    Poursoleyman, Ehsan
    Mansourfar, Gholamreza
    Hassan, Mohammad Kabir
    Homayoun, Saeid
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2024, 189 (03) : 525 - 551
  • [14] Regional resilience to the Covid-19 shock in Polish regions: how is it different from resilience to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis?
    Gajewski, Pawel
    REGIONAL STUDIES REGIONAL SCIENCE, 2022, 9 (01): : 672 - 684
  • [15] HOW TO CONDUCT CSR ACTIVITIES TO BUILD CONSUMER TRUST AND CORPORATE REPUTATION IN COVID-19 PANDEMIC?
    Nguyen, Thao Thi Phuong
    Nguyen, Anh Van
    ASIAN ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2024, 29 (01) : 143 - 171
  • [16] Anatomy of a liquidity crisis: Corporate bonds in the COVID-19 crisis
    O'Hara, Maureen
    Zhou, Xing
    JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, 2021, 142 (01) : 46 - 68
  • [17] Performance of islamic vs conventional banks in OIC countries: Resilience and recovery during Covid-19
    Ghouse, Ghulam
    Ejaz, Nafees
    Bhatti, M. Ishaq
    Aslam, Aribah
    BORSA ISTANBUL REVIEW, 2022, 22 : S60 - S78
  • [18] COVID-19: how to solve the crisis?
    Stoekle, Henri-Corto
    Herve, Christian
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BIOETHICS-REVUE CANADIENNE DE BIOETHIQUE, 2020, 3 (01): : 108 - 109
  • [19] COVID-19 and the ASEAN stock market: a wavelet analysis of conventional and Islamic equity indices
    Ali, Mohsin
    Khattak, Mudeer Ahmed
    Khan, Shabeer
    Khan, Noureen
    STUDIES IN ECONOMICS AND FINANCE, 2023, 40 (04) : 687 - 707
  • [20] DOES GOVERNMENT STRINGENCY POLICY REDUCE THE ADVERSE EFFECTS OF COVID-19 ON ISLAMIC STOCK?
    Hersh, Nafez Fayez
    Masron, Tajul Ariffin
    Pitchay, Anwar Allah
    Malim, Nurhafiza Abdul Kader
    Megat Mazlan, Puteri Nur Balqis
    ASIAN ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2023, 28 (02) : 449 - 479