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Sustainability performance and market risk. A study of the banking sectorSärkiniemi, Arvid, Lindman, Oskar January 2023 (has links)
The financial crisis of 2007-2008 highlighted the societal impacts of bank risk-taking. A strong focus on maximizing profits for shareholders combined with a disregard for, and underestimation of risks led to the downfall of large banks such as Lehman Brothers and multiple other banks getting bailed out by several governments and other banks. The financial crisis spread and impacted all major financial markets across the globe, which highlights the importance of investigating the banking sector from a global perspective. In addition, the influences of corporate social responsibility (CSR) on financial performance and risk have been a growing topic in research as well as in practice. Most banks today invest large amounts of money in CSR activities. The question of how bank spending in CSR activities impacts market risk is important. There are two contradicting views on CSR activities and market risk. The risk mitigation view suggests that banks that focus on stakeholder satisfaction have lower risk due to increased moral capital with stakeholders. The overinvestment view suggests that managers waste scarce resources by overinvesting in CSR activities to further selfish goals and therefore increase risk. This study examines the relationship between sustainability performance (ESG Combined score) and market risk (VaR/CVaR) using a deductive approach. The authors sample 159 banks from 39 countries and all 7 economic regions from 2011-2022. Data is used for testing hypotheses. Results find high ESG Combined Scores are associated with lower VaR/CVaR and results are robust to modifications in VaR/CVaR calculation assumptions. Disaggregation of ESG pillars shows that social pillar scores decrease VaR/CVaR in banks while environmental and governance pillars are insignificant. Results primarily lend support to the risk mitigation view and stakeholder theory stating that firms should focus more on stakeholder satisfaction than maximizing shareholder value. Complementing theories such as legitimacy theory and resources-based view are also considered important theories for explaining the results.
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