180 research outputs found
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On the price of morals in markets: an empirical study of the Swedish AP-Funds and the Norwegian Government Pension Fund
This study empirically analyses the exclusion of companies from investors’ investment universe due to a
company’s business model (sector-based exclusion) or due
to a company’s violations of international norms (normbased exclusion). We conduct a time-series analysis of the performance implications of the exclusion decisions of two leading Nordic investors, Norway’s Government Pension Fund-Global (GPFG) and Sweden’s AP-funds. We find that their portfolios of excluded companies do not generate an abnormal return relative to the funds’ benchmark index. While the exclusion portfolios show higher risk than the respective benchmark, this difference is only statistically
significant for the case of GPFG. These findings suggest
that the exclusion of the companies generally does not
harm funds’ performance. We interpret these findings as
indicative that with exclusionary screening, as practiced by the sample funds, asset owners can meet the ethical
objectives of their beneficiaries without compromising
financial returns
Corporate Responses to Climate Change and Financial Performance: The Impact of Climate Policy
This paper examines the relationship between corporate activities to address climate change and stock performance. By separately analyzing the US and European stock markets for different sub-periods, we highlight the impact of the underlying climate policy regime. Methodologically, we compare risk-adjusted returns of stock portfolios comprising corporations that differ in their responses to climate change. In this respect, we apply the flexible Carhart fourfactor model besides the restricted one-factor model based on the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). While our portfolio analysis shows negative relationships over the entire observation period from 2001 to 2006, we find that a trading strategy, which bought stocks of corporations with a higher level of responses to climate change and sold stocks of corporations with a lower level, led to negative abnormal returns in regions and periods with less ambitious climate policy, but to positive abnormal returns in regions and periods with stringent climate policy
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