Corporate social responsibility and stock market performance
Leonardo Becchetti and
Rocco Ciciretti
Applied Financial Economics, 2009, vol. 19, issue 16, 1283-1293
Abstract:
We analyse the performance of a large sample of Socially Responsible (SR) stocks relative to a Control Sample (CS) of equivalent size for 14 years. We find that individual SR stocks have on average significantly lower returns and unconditional variance than CS stocks when controlling for industry effects. This result is paralleled by descriptive evidence on the lower (daily return) mean and variance of the buy-and-hold strategies on the SR portfolio with respect to those on the control portfolio. Beyond this first evidence we discover that: (i) individual SR stocks are significantly less risky when controlling for conditional heteroskedasticity; (ii) there are no significant differences in risk-adjusted returns between the two buy-and-hold strategies on (SR and CS) portfolios; (iii) the buy-and-hold strategies on the SR portfolio exhibits significantly lower exposition to systematic nondiversifiable risk. These last findings are robust to different-market model, Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (GARCH(1, 1)), Asymmetric Power ARCH (APARCH(1, 1))-model specifications.
Date: 2009
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Working Paper: Corporate Social Responsibility and Stock Market Performance (2006) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:apfiec:v:19:y:2009:i:16:p:1283-1293
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DOI: 10.1080/09603100802584854
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