Source: www.news.ucdavis.edu
A UC Davis study finds that it pays to be green, as companies
that are open about their greenhouse gas emissions and
carbon reduction strategies see stock values rise.
Graduate School of Management Professor Paul Griffin and his
co-author, Yuan Sun of UC Berkeley, tracked stock prices of firms
around the time these companies voluntarily issued press releases
disclosing carbon emission information. In the days after the press
releases were issued, the companies saw their stock prices increase
significantly, Griffin and Sun found.
"When a company makes a voluntary disclosure of this kind, it
signals to the investment community that this is a firm that is
environmentally responsible," Griffin said. "Investors are saying
they would prefer to invest in an environmentally responsible
firm."
The study, "Going Green: Market Reaction to CSR Newswire
Releases," uses the archives of the Corporate Social Responsibility
Newswire to identify climate change related press releases issued
by companies between 2000 and 2010. The researchers tracked the
stock changes of the companies from two days before a press release
was issued to two days after.
For the 172 companies identified as making voluntary
disclosures, average stock prices increased just under a half
percent in the five-day span around the disclosures, according to
the study.
"This is evidence that managers' voluntary climate change
disclosures generate positive returns for shareholders," Griffin
said.
The study looked at voluntary disclosures only, so the authors
could not definitively determine if required disclosures by all
such companies would have yielded similarly favorable stock value
increases.
However, to test their findings, the researchers compared stock
movements of these companies to stock shifts of similar firms that
did not disclose carbon emission information during the same time
periods. The companies that did not disclose climate change
information did not see a statistically significant increase in
values, the study found.
"The matched sample companies do not behave the same way as the
companies that disclose," Griffin said. "If anything, in the
matched sample, the price runs in the opposite direction."
While much of the concern about greenhouse gas emissions has
focused on energy and utility companies, the study by Griffin and
Sun examined carbon emission strategies across a broad range of
industries, including information technology, health care,
telecommunications, and financial services, as well as energy and
utilities.
The researchers analyzed separately the stock changes for
smaller firms that disclosed carbon emission information. These
firms saw an even greater effect on their stock values, with prices
increasing 2.32 percent.
Compared with large firms, small firms are not followed as
closely by analysts, and investors know less about them, so it
makes sense that the release of climate change information would
have a more pronounced effect, according to Griffin and Sun.
In recent years, companies have faced increased pressure from
environmental activists and concerned shareholders to disclose
their greenhouse gas emissions and to develop strategies to reduce
them. Many firms have taken up the challenge, examining the
environmental impacts of all aspects of their businesses, from
supply chains to manufacturing processes to heating and air
conditioning in office buildings.
But other companies have balked at disclosing carbon emissions
and strategies because they fear the information will be
misinterpreted or could lead to litigation and loss of shareholder
value, Griffin said. His study demonstrates that those fears are
misplaced, according to Griffin. "Companies should not be as
reluctant as they have been to provide this information because we
show that it can be shareholder-positive," he said. "Our message is
that it pays to be green."
To read the paper, go to: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1995132
About UC Davis
For more than 100 years, UC Davis has engaged in teaching,
research and public service that matter to California and transform
the world. Located close to the state capital, UC Davis has more
than 32,000 students, more than 2,500 faculty and more than 21,000
staff, an annual research budget that exceeds $684 million, a
comprehensive health system and 13 specialized research centers.
The university offers interdisciplinary graduate study and more
than 100 undergraduate majors in four colleges - Agricultural and
Environmental Sciences, Biological Sciences, Engineering, and
Letters and Science. It also houses six professional schools -
Education, Law, Management, Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and the
Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing.