Four Facts about ESG Beliefs and Investor Portfolios
Stefano Giglio,
Matteo Maggiori,
Ströbel, Johannes,
Zhenhao Tan,
Stephen Utkus and
Xiao Xu
No 18052, CEPR Discussion Papers from C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers
Abstract:
We analyze survey data on ESG beliefs and preferences in a large panel of retail investors linked to administrative data on their investment portfolios. The survey elicits investors’ expectations of long- term ESG equity returns and asks about their motivations, if any, to invest in ESG assets. We document four facts. First, investors generally expected ESG investments to underperform the market. Between mid-2021 and late-2022, the average expected 10-year annualized return of ESG investments relative to the overall stock market was −1.4%. Second, there is substantial heterogeneity across investors in their ESG return expectations and their motives for ESG investing: 45% of survey respondents do not see any reason to invest in ESG, 25% are primarily motivated by ethical considerations, 22% are driven by climate hedging motives, and 7% are motivated by return expectations. Third, there is a link between individuals’ reported ESG investment motives and their actual investment behaviors, with the highest ESG portfolio holdings among individuals who report ethics-driven investment motives. Fourth, financial considerations matter independently of other investment motives: we find meaningful ESG holdings only for investors who expect these investments to outperform the market, even among those investors who reported that their most important ESG investment motives were ethical or hedging reasons
Keywords: Expectations; Surveys (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: G11 G12 R30 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-04
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Related works:
Journal Article: Four facts about ESG beliefs and investor portfolios (2025) 
Working Paper: Four Facts About ESG Beliefs and Investor Portfolios (2023) 
Working Paper: FOUR FACTS ABOUT ESG BELIEFS AND INVESTOR PORTFOLIOS (2023) 
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