Discussion paper

DP20066 Does Biodiversity Risk Matter to Capital Markets? New Evidence from China

This paper presents macro-, meso-, and firm-level measures of biodiversity risk specific to the Chinese capital market, and investigates how biodiversity risk relates to individual stock returns. Our measures indicate that biodiversity risk in China varies over time and across industries, and that aggregate attention to biodiversity issues has risen sharply over the past two decades. We then provide new evidence that corporate biodiversity risk exposure negatively relates to stock returns in the cross-section, significantly more so when aggregate attention to biodiversity issues rises and industry-level biodiversity risk increases. Furthermore, we obtain some evidence that weekly returns on a portfolio long (short) on stocks with low (high) biodiversity risk positively covary with contemporaneous shocks to aggregate biodiversity attention, although negatively with lagged shocks to attention. In addition, institutional ownership is lower when firms appear more vulnerable to biodiversity risk, even more so in years of rising attention to biodiversity.

£6.00
Citation

Chen, Z, J Derwall, X Gao and K Koedijk (2025), ‘DP20066 Does Biodiversity Risk Matter to Capital Markets? New Evidence from China‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 20066. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp20066