气候变化与商业地产市场

IF 3.2 3区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS
David C. Ling, Spenser Robinson, Andrew R. Sanderford, Chongyu Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候灾害事件的经济影响因时间和地点而异。本文研究了气候对当地房地产市场的冲击是如何传导到资本市场的,并提供了前瞻性气候风险在多大程度上被资本化到这些房地产市场的公共估值中的证据。我们首先量化了房地产投资组合在最近发生气候事件的地区的风险敞口(事件风险敞口)。利用事件研究框架,我们发现在事件发生后的时期,事前事件风险敞口每增加一个标准差,季度股票回报率就会下降 0.2-1.4 个百分点。横截面分析表明,回报率效应的差异可以用该地区对气候变化关注程度的不同来解释。同样,我们发现前瞻性气候风险评估只对关注气候变化的市场的公司估值产生负面影响。与这些发现相一致,我们提供的证据表明,气候事件(冲击)会导致散户投资者(噪音交易者)减持股票,而在这些交易中,大股东往往会站在相反的一方。我们还表明,以消费者情绪为条件有助于解释股票回报率对气候事件反应的横截面差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate change and commercial property markets

The economic effect of climate hazard events varies by time and by location. This paper investigates how climate shocks to local property markets transmit to capital markets and provides evidence of the extent to which forward-looking climate risk is capitalized into the public valuations of those property markets. We first quantify the exposure of real estate portfolios to locations that recently experienced climate events (Event Exposure). Using an event study framework, we find that, in the post-event period, a one-standard-deviation increase in ex-ante Event Exposure is associated with a 0.2–1.4 percentage points decrease in quarterly stock returns. Cross-sectional analyses reveal that differences in return effects can be explained by variation in the extent to which the area focuses on climate change. Similarly, we find that forward-looking climate risk assessment negatively affects firm valuations only in markets with a focus on climate change. Consistent with these findings, we provide evidence that climate events (shocks) induce retail investors (noise traders) to decrease their stock holdings and that blockholders tend to take the opposite side in these transactions. We also show that conditioning on consumer sentiment helps to explain cross-sectional variation in the response of stock returns to climate events.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Regional Science (JRS) publishes original analytical research at the intersection of economics and quantitative geography. Since 1958, the JRS has published leading contributions to urban and regional thought including rigorous methodological contributions and seminal theoretical pieces. The JRS is one of the most highly cited journals in urban and regional research, planning, geography, and the environment. The JRS publishes work that advances our understanding of the geographic dimensions of urban and regional economies, human settlements, and policies related to cities and regions.
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