Ilaria Piatti , Queen Mary University of London Joel Shapiro , Said Business School, University of Oxford Xuan Wang , SBE Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute
November 17, 2023
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We model investors that take into account the amount of public good that firms produce (e.g., by reducing carbon emissions) when making their portfolio allocation. In an equilibrium asset pricing model with production and public goods provision, we find that environmentally conscious investors invest more than others, invest more in clean firms, and may invest more in dirty firms. Whether clean firms exhibit CAPM alphas depends on the amount of systematic risk of the firm and its relative contribution to the public good. There is underprovision of the public good in equilibrium. Lower government provision may lead to a surge in investment and government provision may be dominated by green subsidies. Finally, we extend the model to analyze negative externalities, donations, and uncertainty regarding public good provision.
J.E.L classification codes: G11, G12, H41
Keywords:Sustainable finance, ESG investing, public good pro-vision, asset pricing