Browsing by Subject "Business enterprises -- Evaluation"
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- ItemEnvironmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Scores and Firm Profitability Across Countries and Sectors: An Empirical Analysis(2021) Thissen, Emily; Jilani, SalehaThis paper explores the relationship between a firm's Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) score, and its profitability across sectors and countries. More specifically, this work aims to understand if European and Asian firms see a greater or lesser effect of ESG Score on profits relative to firms in the United States. This work also explores whether certain componentsof the ESG scores (environmental, social, or governance) have a more significant impact on profitability inspecific sectors. Using ESG score and firm financial data from Thomson Reuter's Eikon and control variables for firm size, risk, and industry, a three-part analysis was run. An initial analysis of the ESG combined score and the individual pillar scores and gross profit relationship is conducted using OLS regression and time and firm fixed effects regression analysis. Next, to understand how geographic region plays a role in the correlation between firm ESG score and financial performance, OLS regressions are run using regional dummy variables and interaction terms between regional dummy variables and ESG score. Lastly, this thesis explores how the ESG score-gross profit relationship varies across industries using interaction terms between the industry dummy variable for each industry with the ESG score variable. The results suggest a positive relationship between ESG score and gross profit, with varying effects for different pillars. The most significant effect was on the environmental pillar. The results also show that European firms see a greater correlation between financial performance and higher ESG scores than United States firms. The analysis of Asian firms did not show a more significant relationship between financial performance and higher ESG scores compared to the United States. Across sectors, results varied. This suggests a clear direction for future research in understanding the relationship between more disaggregated industrial categories and different components of the ESG score. This thesis offers new insights into regional and cross-sector differences in the effect of both combined ESG score and the individual ESG pillar scores.
- ItemESG Investing in Uncertainty: Analyzing the Returns of ESG Within Various States of Investor Sentiment(2021) Turkson, Jesse; Binder, Carola ConcesThis paper examines the relationship between corporate responsibility and stock performance through various levels of fear in the market. I utilize Environmental, Social, and Governance scores (provided by Thomson Reuters Eikon) for measures of corporate responsibility, and the Volatility Index, or VIX (created by the Chicago Board Options Exchange), to quantify levels of fear. Stock performance is measured weekly, with companies from the S&P 500 as my representative sample. Results focus on ESG Total scores and the individual pillar breakdowns for each ESG component. My findings demonstrate that in the presence of considerably higher levels of fear, increases in ESG scores yield positive returns. On the other hand, lower levels of fear resulted in negative returns. My results suggest that there is an association between ESG and stock returns, with the direction being dependent on the level of investor fear in the market.