Open Access
Open access
Management Science, volume 69, issue 12, pages 7492-7516

Climate Risk and Capital Structure

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-12-01
scimago Q1
SJR5.438
CiteScore8.8
Impact factor4.6
ISSN00251909, 15265501
Strategy and Management
Management Science and Operations Research
Abstract

We use firm-level data that measure forward-looking physical climate risk to examine the impact of climate risk on capital structure. We find that greater physical climate risk leads to lower leverage in the post-2015 period (i.e., after the Paris Agreement and the first step of standardization of disclosure of climate risk information). Our results hold after controlling for firm characteristics known to determine leverage, including credit ratings. Our evidence shows that the reduction in leverage related to climate risk is shared between a demand effect (the firm’s optimal leverage decreases) and a supply effect (bankers and bondholders increase spreads when lending to firms with the greatest risk). Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that physical climate risk affects leverage via larger expected distress costs and higher operating costs.

This paper has been accepted by Colin Mayer for the Management Science Special Issue on Business and Climate Change.

Funding: This project benefited from the financial support of the Institut Europlace de Finance (Grant EIF 2019). Q. Moreau acknowledges financial support from the French Association of Institutional Investors. The authors have received in-kind support from Carbone 4 for this project in the form of a data set of climate risk ratings.

Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4952 .

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