Conference Agenda
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 9th May 2025, 09:09:02am CEST
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Session Overview |
Session | |||
CF 14: ESG and corporate investment
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Presentations | |||
ID: 756
Do Consumers Care About ESG? Evidence from Barcode-Level Sales Data 1The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; 2London Business School; 3Southwestern University of Finance and Economics; 4University of Texas at Dallas, United States of America Using granular barcode-level sales data from retail stores, we show that environmental and social ratings are positively related to local sales, especially in counties with more Democratic-leaning and higher-income households. Higher ratings of a firm's product market rivals negatively affect a firm's own sales. Controlling for product-year-level heterogeneity, monthly product sales decline after negative firm news on environmental and social issues. Finally, immediately after major natural and environmental disasters, sales in counties located close to the disasters become more sensitive to environmental ratings. Our study provides direct evidence that environmental and social activities affect the revenues of a firm.
ID: 1182
Social Preferences and Corporate Investment 1University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg; 2Vienna University of Technology; 3Monash University; 4Vienna University of Business and Economics This paper develops a unified framework to analyze how different types of social preferences – deontological, non-consequentialist, and consequentialist – affect corporate investment. While all preferences influence corporate technology choices when social investors are strategic, only the former two have an effect in a competitive equilibrium, as long as the aggregate internalized social harm remains finite. We also shed new light on the effectiveness of social investors’ portfolio strategies. The results depend crucially on how technology choices are endogenized. The cost of capital wedge due to social preferences is not a relevant measure to evaluate the magnitude of their effects.
ID: 175
Climate Innovation and Carbon Emissions: Evidence from Supply Chain Networks 1Toulouse School of Economics; 2Peking University, HSBC Business School Please find in the attached paper
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