2001
DOI: 10.2307/2676219
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The Effect of Green Investment on Corporate Behavior

Abstract: This paper explores the effect of exclusionary "ethical investing" on corporate behavior in a risk averse, equilibrium setting. While arguments exist that ethical investing can inßuence a Þrm's cost of capital, and so affect investment, no equilibrium model has been presented to do so. We show that exclusionary ethical investing leads to "polluting" Þrms being held by fewer investors since "green" investors eschew polluting Þrms' stock. This lack of risk-sharing among "non-green" investors leads to lower stock… Show more

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Cited by 973 publications
(544 citation statements)
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“…Heinkel et al (2001) construct a model where a subset of investors have green preferences and refuse to hold stock from "dirty" firms. If the pool of green investors is large enough, equity from green firms will sell at a premium, leading to lower capital costs for these firms.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Heinkel et al (2001) construct a model where a subset of investors have green preferences and refuse to hold stock from "dirty" firms. If the pool of green investors is large enough, equity from green firms will sell at a premium, leading to lower capital costs for these firms.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the existing studies focus on analyzing environmental investing from a corporate finance perspective. For instance, Heinkel et al (2001)'s estimates indicate that more than 20% green investors are required to induce any polluting firms to reform. As far as we know, White (1995) is the only previous paper to compare environmental funds with both SRI investment and conventional investment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, although such topic has received growing attention from practitioners and scholars ( For example, see Cox et al, 2004;Heinkel et al, 2001;Rivoli, 2003;Schepers and Sethi, 2003) knowledge in this area is still controversial (i.e. see May et al, 2007;Campbell, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%