TY - JOUR
T1 - ESG greenwashing and stock price crash risk: a channel analysis
AU - Hendijani Zadeh, Mohammad
AU - Hammami, Ahmad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Using US data from the S&P 1500 indexed firms, we offer empirical evidence concerning the impact of ESG greenwashing on firms’ risk of future stock price crash. Specifically, we show that ESG greenwashing is positively associated with firms’ risk of a future stock price crash. Our findings are robust to instrumental variable, difference-in-differences, and entropy balancing approaches. Furthermore, we identify five potential channels (mediating factors) through which ESG greenwashing can increase the risk of a future stock price crash–the degree of private corporate news hiding, financial analysts’ forecast dispersion, investment inefficiency, excessive managerial risk-taking, and equity mispricing. Our findings suggest that firms exhibiting higher levels of ESG greenwashing tend to have greater degrees of private corporate news hiding, wider financial analysts’ forecast dispersions, increased investment inefficiency, heightened managerial risk-taking, and equity mispricing, all contributing to an elevated risk of future stock price crashes.
AB - Using US data from the S&P 1500 indexed firms, we offer empirical evidence concerning the impact of ESG greenwashing on firms’ risk of future stock price crash. Specifically, we show that ESG greenwashing is positively associated with firms’ risk of a future stock price crash. Our findings are robust to instrumental variable, difference-in-differences, and entropy balancing approaches. Furthermore, we identify five potential channels (mediating factors) through which ESG greenwashing can increase the risk of a future stock price crash–the degree of private corporate news hiding, financial analysts’ forecast dispersion, investment inefficiency, excessive managerial risk-taking, and equity mispricing. Our findings suggest that firms exhibiting higher levels of ESG greenwashing tend to have greater degrees of private corporate news hiding, wider financial analysts’ forecast dispersions, increased investment inefficiency, heightened managerial risk-taking, and equity mispricing, all contributing to an elevated risk of future stock price crashes.
UR - https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2025.2521040
U2 - 10.1080/00036846.2025.2521040
DO - 10.1080/00036846.2025.2521040
M3 - Article
JO - Applied Economics
JF - Applied Economics
IS - Issue
ER -