33 research outputs found
Climate Change: EU taxonomy and forward looking analysis in the context of emerging climate related and environmental risks
Climate change is causing substantial structural adjustments to the global economy. Several sectors, such as coal and steel, are
undergoing severe problems related to the inevitable transition to a low-carbon economy, while others such as renewables and
new environmental adaptation technologies are benefiting substantially. In this context, regulators are beginning to intervene on
the legislation, while investors, customers and civil society are looking for alternatives to mitigate, adapt and make these issues
more transparent. This article aims to analyze the impact that these changes will inevitably have on banks' balance sheets,
introducing new risks but also opportunities. The final purpose is to help banks integrate climate risks into their organizational
framework and to provide guidance on the implementation of the recommendations published by the Task Force on Climaterelated
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) within the broader Financial Stability Board (FSB) objectives and the UN Environment
Finance Initiative (UNEP FI). Starting from a long-term perspective, the work suggests considering climate risk as a financial
risk, overcoming traditional approaches that focus on reputational risk. This change implies the integration of climate change
risk into the logic of Risk Management (Credit, Market and Operational risks) and a consequent sharing of responsibilities with
the structures of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). The TCFD recommendations urge banks to use forward looking
scenario analyzes, including stress tests, to evaluate and disseminate the "actual and potential impacts" of climate-related risks
and opportunities, suggesting in particular to consider the consequences in terms of two categories of risk: physical and transition
risk
[Editorial] Accounting scholarship and management by numbers
There is a plethora of indices ranking universities, departments, and individual researchers based on a variety of indices. These invariably include a measurement of research, usually based on a combination of quantity and quality of journal publications. Informal discussions with accounting researchers invariably turns to the question of journal rankings and performance management indicators. Why is this so
Fair Value Measurement Under Level 2 Inputs: Do Market and Transaction Multiples Catch Firm-Specific Risk Factors?
This paper focuses on fair value measurement under the IFRS 13 assumptions and the reliability of the market and transaction multiples evaluations (\u201cLevel 2\u201d methods). We test the reliability of multiples evaluation approaches in different economic sectors, by comparing the fair value of 1678 companies estimated by multiples with the effective market capitalization over 15 years. Multiples\u2019 fair value does not provide a reliable measure of a company\u2019s value, with a gap that varies depending upon portfolios and time. In the case of observable Level 2 fair value indicators for a market, such as market multiples, the company\u2019s fair value is not consistent with the real market value. Thus, whenever Level 2 indicators are not observable, the method is increasing volatility and intrinsic evaluation risk
To green or not to green? How CSR mechanisms at the governance level affect the likelihood of banks pursuing green product strategies
Purpose – This study aims to investigate the relationship between banks’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) mechanisms at the governance level and their likelihood of pursuing green product strategies. It also examines how CSR characteristics and green product strategies have evolved across regions and time.
Design/methodology/approach – Using a sample of listed banks from different economic areas over the period 2010–2019, the authors examine how CSR mechanisms at the governance level and green product strategies, which they categorize through principal component analysis, have changed over time and across regions. The authors then conducted panel regression to identify which CSR characteristics affect the likelihood that banks implement green product strategies.
Findings – Results show that CSR mechanisms related to bank transparency and commitment to the community, such as sustainability reporting and United Nations Global Compact adherence, are substantive in affecting the likelihood of banks pursuing green product strategies. In contrast, mechanisms related to internal organization, such as the presence of a CSR Committee and an environmental management team, tend to play more a symbolic role. Findings also support a
reconsideration of environmental, social and governance-related compensation schemes, which appear to decrease the likelihood that banks engage in some forms of green financing. The likelihood of banks pursuing green product strategies varies across regions and has increased after the Paris Agreement.
Research limitations/implications – The findings are useful in guiding regulators, supervisory authorities and policymakers in defining policies that can create conditions for banks to develop green products and, hence, encourage the sustainability behaviors of their clients. Empirical evidence reveals that some corporate governance mechanisms and green product strategies correlate positively, institutional factors matter and public policies can play a role in strengthening such a correlation.
However, results are limited to specific geographical areas and listed banks.
Originality/value – This study contributes to the institutional literature by showing that some corporate governance mechanisms are substantive in increasing the likelihood of banks pursuing green product strategies, while others are more symbolic. It also extends the literature by analyzing how banks belonging to different geographical areas have responded, over time, to sustainability objectives