XF-E2178KJ-K Climate regulatory risk and corporate bonds
Abstract
Concerns about climate risk suggest it should affect risk assessment and pricing of corporate securities, particularly for firms facing potential regulatory restrictions. Employing a shock to expected climate regulations, we find support for this hypothesis given our evidence that climate regulatory risks causally affect bond credit ratings and yield spreads. Moreover, a structural credit model indicates the increased spreads for high carbon issuers, especially those located in stricter regulatory environments, derive from changes in firms' asset volatilities rather than asset values, highlighting that regulatory uncertainty affects security pricing. The results have important implications for corporate decisions, portfolio management, and policymaking.
Source: resolved
Topics
Cited by (2)
Other RESEARCH documents in the registry that cite this work.
How to Cite This Record
Use the XFID in citations to create a stable, permanent reference that resolves to this registry entry regardless of the source URL.
National Bureau of Economic Research (2022). Climate regulatory risk and corporate bonds. XFID: XF-E2178KJ-K. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XFE2178KJK
XF-E2178KJ-K