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Temperature shocks and the cost of equity capital:...
Journal article

Temperature shocks and the cost of equity capital: Implications for climate change perceptions

Abstract

Financial market information can provide an objective assessment of losses anticipated from temperature changes. In an APT model in which temperature shocks are a systematic risk factor, the risk premium is significantly negative, loadings for most assets are negative, and asset portfolios in more vulnerable industries have stronger negative loadings on a temperature shock factor. Weighted average increases in the cost of equity capital attributed to uncertainty about temperature changes are 0.22 percent, implying a present value loss of 7.92 percent of wealth. These costs represent a new channel that may contribute to cost of climate change assessment.

Authors

Balvers R; Du D; Zhao X

Journal

Journal of Banking & Finance, Vol. 77, , pp. 18–34

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

April 1, 2017

DOI

10.1016/j.jbankfin.2016.12.013

ISSN

0378-4266

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