Content area

Abstract

In China, many firms advertise that they follow environmentally friendly practices to cover their true activities, a practice called greenwashing, which can cause the public to doubt the sincerity of greenization messages. In this study, I investigate how the market values greenwashing and further examine whether corporate environmental performance can explain different and asymmetric market reactions to environmentally friendly and unfriendly firms. Using a sample from the Chinese stock market, I provide strong evidence to show that greenwashing is significantly negatively associated with cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) around the exposure of greenwashing. In addition, corporate environmental performance is significantly positively associated with CAR around the exposure of greenwashing. Furthermore, my findings suggest that corporate environmental performance has two distinct effects on CAR around the exposure of greenwashing: the competitive effect for environmentally friendly firms and the contagious effect for potential environmental wrongdoers, respectively. The results are robust to various sensitivity tests.

Details

Title
How the Market Values Greenwashing? Evidence from China
Author
Du, Xingqiang
Pages
547-574
Publication year
2015
Publication date
May 2015
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
01674544
e-ISSN
15730697
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1676454398
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2015