Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 20th May 2024, 08:33:29am CEST

External resources will be made available 15 min before a session starts. You may have to reload the page to access the resources.

 
 
Session Overview
Session
Session 7: ESG & Activism
Time:
Friday, 19/Jan/2024:
2:00pm - 4:15pm

Session Chair: Santiago Barraza, ESCP Business School

Show help for 'Increase or decrease the abstract text size'
Presentations

Which Institutional Investors Drive Corporate Sustainability

Marco Ceccarelli1, Simon Glossner2, Mikael Homanen3,4, Daniel A. Schmidt5,6

1VU Amsterdam, Germany; 2Federal Reserve Board of Governors; 3PRI; 4Bayes Business School; 5Technical University of Munich (TUM); 6Boston Consulting Group

Discussant: Francois Koulischer (University of Luxembourg)

Many institutional investors publicly commit to some form of responsible investment. This raises concerns about the credibility of such claims. We use participation in collaborative engagements to identify ``Leaders’’, i.e., institutional investors that are truly committed to improving firms' sustainability outcomes. Despite owning only 2.2% of the average firm, Leaders alone explain the positive relationship between institutional ownership and firms’ environmental and social performance. In line with committed owners facilitating corporate change, engagement campaigns are successful only when targeted firms are substantially owned by Leaders. We also find that these firms are less at risk of experiencing negative incidents.

Ceccarelli-Which Institutional Investors Drive Corporate Sustainability-102CeccarelliMarcoCeccarelli.pdf


Performance Attribution for Portfolio Constraints

Andrew W. Lo1,2, Ruixun Zhang2,3

1MIT Sloan School of Management; 2MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering; 3Peking University

Discussant: Nabil Kahale (ESCP Business School)

We propose a new performance attribution framework that decomposes a constrained portfolio's holdings, expected utility, expected returns, variance, and realized returns into components attributable to: (1) the unconstrained mean-variance optimal portfolio; (2) individual static constraints; and (3) information, if any, arising from those constraints. A key contribution of our framework is the recognition that constraints may contain information that is correlated with returns, in which case imposing such constraints can affect performance. The excess return from information is positive (negative) when this correlation is positive (negative) and the constraint is binding. The excess variance of a portfolio is negative when the holdings of a shrinkage portfolio and the holdings attributable to constraints are positively correlated, and the degree to which variance is reduced depends on the squared correlation between returns and constraints. We provide simulated and empirical examples involving constraints on ESG portfolios. Contrary to conventional wisdom, constraints may improve portfolio performance under certain scenarios.

Lo-Performance Attribution for Portfolio Constraints-115ZhangRuixunZhang.pdf


Mutual Fund Disagreement and Firm Value: Passive vs. Active Voice

Iris Wang1, Jan Bena2

1McMaster University, Canada; 2University of British Columbia, Canada

Discussant: Christian Lundblad (UNC Chapel Hill)

We develop a novel measure of disagreement in voice between active and passive mutual funds using their proxy votes that captures shareholder conflicts in public firms. We show that the disagreement in voice between passive and active mutual funds destroys firm value and suggest that the firm value loss is due to conflicting incentives between the two groups of mutual funds. Using Federal Open Market Committee announcements with press conferences as events that create scope for investors to make informed votes and interpret news differently for individual firms, we show that such value-destroying effect of disagreement is likely causal.

Wang-Mutual Fund Disagreement and Firm Value-122WangIrisWang.pdf


 
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address:
Privacy Statement · Conference: HF Conference 2024
Conference Software: ConfTool Pro 2.6.149
© 2001–2024 by Dr. H. Weinreich, Hamburg, Germany