Pricing Climate Change Exposure

被引:52
|
作者
Sautner, Zacharias [1 ]
van Lent, Laurence [1 ]
Vilkov, Grigory [1 ]
Zhang, Ruishen [2 ]
机构
[1] Frankfurt Sch Finance & Management, D-60322 Frankfurt Am Main, Germany
[2] Shanghai Univ Finance & Econ, Inst Accounting & Finance, Shanghai 200433, Peoples R China
关键词
climate finance; climate change exposure; climate risk premium; tail risk; climate change opportunities; EXPECTED RETURN; CROSS-SECTION; RISK; VOLATILITY;
D O I
10.1287/mnsc.2023.4686
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
We estimate the risk premium for firm-level climate change exposure among S&P 500 stocks and its time-series evolution between 2005 to 2020. Exposure reflects the attention paid by market participants in earnings calls to a firm's climate-related risks and opportunities. When extracted from realized returns, the unconditional risk premium is insignificant but exhibits a period with a positive risk premium before the financial crisis and a steady increase thereafter. Forward-looking expected return proxies deliver an unconditionally positive risk premium with maximum values of 0.5%-1% p.a., depending on the proxy, between 2011 and 2014. The risk premium has been lower since 2015, especially when the expected return proxy explicitly accounts for the higher opportunities and lower crash risks that characterize high-exposure stocks. This finding arises as the priced part of the risk premium primarily originates from uncertainty about climate-related upside opportunities. In the time series, the risk premium is negatively associated with green innovation; Big Three holdings; and environmental, social, and governance fund flows and positively associated with climate change adaptation programs.
引用
收藏
页码:7540 / 7561
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Firm-Level Climate Change Exposure
    Sautner, Zacharias
    Van Lent, Laurence
    Vilkov, Grigory
    Zhang, Ruishen
    JOURNAL OF FINANCE, 2023, : 1449 - 1498
  • [12] Climate change and the pricing of sovereign debt: Insights from European markets
    Boitan, Iustina Alina
    Marchewka-Bartkowiak, Kamilla
    RESEARCH IN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE, 2022, 62
  • [13] Physical climate change exposure and firms' adaptation strategy
    Li, Xia
    STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2025, 46 (03) : 750 - 789
  • [14] Extreme weather exposure and support for climate change adaptation
    Ray, Aaron
    Hughes, Llewelyn
    Konisky, David M.
    Kaylor, Charles
    GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2017, 46 : 104 - 113
  • [15] Heat Exposure and Maternal Health in the Face of Climate Change
    Kuehn, Leeann
    McCormick, Sabrina
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2017, 14 (08):
  • [16] Translating niche features: Modelling differential exposure of Argentine reptiles to global climate change
    Nori, Javier
    Moreno Azocar, Debora L.
    Cruz, Felix B.
    Bonino, Marcelo F.
    Leynaud, Gerardo C.
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2016, 41 (04) : 367 - 375
  • [17] Assessing Climate Change Exposure for the Adaptation of Conservation Management: The Importance of Scale in Mountain Landscapes
    Gomez-Vadillo, Monica
    Mingarro, Mario
    Ursul, Guim
    Wilson, Robert J.
    LAND, 2022, 11 (11)
  • [18] Climate change impacts on respiratory health: exposure, vulnerability, and risk
    Covert, Hannah H.
    Wahid, Firoz Abdoel
    Wenzel, Sally E.
    Lichtveld, Maureen Y.
    PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2023, 103 (04) : 2507 - 2522
  • [19] Impact of Climate Change on Vibrio vulnificus Abundance and Exposure Risk
    Reem Deeb
    Daniel Tufford
    Geoffrey I. Scott
    Janet Gooch Moore
    Kirstin Dow
    Estuaries and Coasts, 2018, 41 : 2289 - 2303
  • [20] Global socioeconomic exposure of heat extremes under climate change
    Chen, Jie
    Liu, Yujie
    Pan, Tao
    Ciais, Philippe
    Ma, Ting
    Liu, Yanhua
    Yamazaki, Dai
    Ge, Quansheng
    Penuelas, Josep
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2020, 277