Centres Of Excellence

To focus on new and emerging areas of research and education, Centres of Excellence have been established within the Institute. These ‘virtual' centres draw on resources from its stakeholders, and interact with them to enhance core competencies

Read More >>

Faculty

Faculty members at IIMB generate knowledge through cutting-edge research in all functional areas of management that would benefit public and private sector companies, and government and society in general.

Read More >>

IIMB Management Review

Journal of Indian Institute of Management Bangalore

IIM Bangalore offers Degree-Granting Programmes, a Diploma Programme, Certificate Programmes and Executive Education Programmes and specialised courses in areas such as entrepreneurship and public policy.

Read More >>

About IIMB

The Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIMB) believes in building leaders through holistic, transformative and innovative education

Read More >>

Journal Article: 'The Carbon Premium: Correlation or Causality? Evidence from S&P 500 Companies' - Prof. Sankarshan Basu

Sankarshan Basu

Abstract: In the context of whether investors are aware of carbon-related risks, it is often hypothesized that there may be a carbon premium in the value of stocks of firms, conferring an abnormal excess value to firms’ shares as a form of compensation to investors for their transition risk exposure through the ownership of carbon instensive stocks. However, there is little consensus in the literature regarding the existence of such a premium. Moreover few studies have examined whether the correlation that is often observed is actually causal. The pertinent question is whether more polluting firms give higher returns or do firms with high returns have less incentive to decarbonize? In this study, we investigate whether firms’ emissions is causally linked to the presence of a carbon premium in a panel of 141 firms listed in the S&P500 index using fixed-effects analysis, with propensity score weighting to control for selection bias in which firms increase their emissions. We find that there is a statistically
significant positive carbon premium associated with Scope 1 emissions, while there is no significant premium associated with Scope 2 emissions, implying that risks associated with direct emissions by the firm are priced, while bought emissions are not.

Authors’ Names:  Namasi G. Sankar, Suryadeepto Nag, Siddhartha P. Chakrabarty, and Sankarshan Basu

Journal Name: Energy Economics

URL: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/The-Carbon-

Journal Article: 'The Carbon Premium: Correlation or Causality? Evidence from S&P 500 Companies' - Prof. Sankarshan Basu

Sankarshan Basu

Abstract: In the context of whether investors are aware of carbon-related risks, it is often hypothesized that there may be a carbon premium in the value of stocks of firms, conferring an abnormal excess value to firms’ shares as a form of compensation to investors for their transition risk exposure through the ownership of carbon instensive stocks. However, there is little consensus in the literature regarding the existence of such a premium. Moreover few studies have examined whether the correlation that is often observed is actually causal. The pertinent question is whether more polluting firms give higher returns or do firms with high returns have less incentive to decarbonize? In this study, we investigate whether firms’ emissions is causally linked to the presence of a carbon premium in a panel of 141 firms listed in the S&P500 index using fixed-effects analysis, with propensity score weighting to control for selection bias in which firms increase their emissions. We find that there is a statistically
significant positive carbon premium associated with Scope 1 emissions, while there is no significant premium associated with Scope 2 emissions, implying that risks associated with direct emissions by the firm are priced, while bought emissions are not.

Authors’ Names:  Namasi G. Sankar, Suryadeepto Nag, Siddhartha P. Chakrabarty, and Sankarshan Basu

Journal Name: Energy Economics

URL: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/The-Carbon-