The information content of managers' climate risk disclosure: Evidence from conference calls

Brian Bratten, Sung Yuan (Mark) Cheng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

We explore the determinants of voluntary disclosures about climate risks made by managers during earnings conference calls, and examine whether these disclosures provide decision-useful information to investors. Using a sample of more than 70,000 conference-call transcripts from 2005-2020 with over 6,000 disclosures related to climate risk events, we find that disclosure is more common for smaller firms with higher but more volatile performance. We also show that firms often bundle climate risk disclosures with bad news about earnings in conference calls that are longer and have a more negative tone. Controlling for earnings news and firm fixed effects, we find a negative stock price reaction to climate risk disclosures in conference calls, but we also find that these disclosures are positively associated with abnormal trading volume, suggesting investors have different beliefs about how to incorporate them. Finally, we find that the negative stock price reaction to bad news about earnings is less pronounced when managers provide climate risk disclosures. Overall, our results provide evidence on when managers make climate risk disclosures in conference calls and how investors react, and are consistent with regulators' proposals for more specific guidance on the form and content of such disclosures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107321
JournalJournal of Accounting and Public Policy
Volume51
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Inc.

Funding

We thank Monika Causholli, Jesse Chan, Nargess Golshan, Jeff Hales, Tyler Kleppe, James Myers, Linda Myers, Sarah Noor (discussant), Chris Pearson, Aaron Roeschley, Terry Shevlin, Hong Xie, Dave Ziebart and participants at the American Accounting Association Annual Meeting, the University of Kentucky and the University of Tennessee for their helpful comments. We thank Chuancai (Michael) Zhang for generously sharing the data of earnings conference call transcripts, and Tyler Kleppe for sharing the data, codes, and link tables related to extreme weather events. We also acknowledge financial support from the Von Allmen School of Accountancy and the Gatton College of Business & Economics .

FundersFunder number
Von Allmen School of Accountancy
Gatton College of Business/Economics
University of Kentucky
University of Tennessee

    Keywords

    • Climate change
    • ESG
    • Greenwashing
    • Market reactions
    • Risk disclosure
    • Sustainability disclosure

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Accounting
    • Sociology and Political Science

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