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ESG controversies and controversial ESG: about silent saints and small sinners

Gregor Dorfleitner (), Christian Kreuzer and Christian Sparrer
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Gregor Dorfleitner: Universität Regensburg
Christian Kreuzer: Universität Regensburg
Christian Sparrer: Universität Regensburg

Journal of Asset Management, 2020, vol. 21, issue 5, No 2, 393-412

Abstract: Abstract Based on an extensive international dataset containing Thomson Reuters environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) rating, as well as Thomson Reuters newest controversies and combined score of an average of 2500 companies in the years 2002–2018, this article contributes to the existing discourse of the relationship between corporate social performance and corporate financial performance (CFP) by examining the Fama and French (J Financ Econ 116(1):1–22, 2015) five-factor risk-adjusted performance of positive screened best and worst portfolios, based on a 10 $$\%$$ % cutoff, respectively, for equally, value- and rank-weighted strategies in the European, US and global market. Furthermore, the controversies score allows us to examine the mid-to-long-term effects of scandals on the CFP without having to rely on the event study methodology. Even though a value-weighted strategy does not show any significant abnormal returns, we examined a significant outperformance for equally weighted worst ESG portfolios and best controversies strategies. These results strongly indicate that this is, on the one hand, driven by low-rated smaller companies (“small sinners”) and clean-coated firms with regard to controversies (“silent saints”) on the other hand. The findings hold for several robustness checks such as adjusting the cutoff rates or splitting the dataset across time.

Keywords: ESG; Corporate social responsibility; Corporate social performance; Controversy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (40)

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DOI: 10.1057/s41260-020-00178-x

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