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Weathering exchange rates: estimating the effect of climate change vulnerability on foreign currency hedging using a text-based approach

Tanakorn Likitapiwat (Chulalongkorn Business School, Bangkok, Thailand)
Pornsit Jiraporn (Penn State Great Valley School of Graduate Professional Studies, Pennsylvania State University, Malvern, Pennsylvania, USA)
Sirimon Treepongkaruna (Sasin School of Management, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand) (UWA Business School, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia)

Journal of Accounting Literature

ISSN: 0737-4607

Article publication date: 21 September 2023

237

Abstract

Purpose

The authors investigate whether firm-specific vulnerability to climate change influences foreign exchange hedging, using a novel text-based measure of firm-level climate change exposure generated by state-of-the-art machine-learning algorithms.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors' empirical analysis includes firm-fixed effects, random-effects regressions, propensity score matching (PSM), entropy balancing, an instrumental-variable analysis and using an exogenous shock as a quasi-natural experiment.

Findings

The authors' findings suggest that greater climate change exposure brings about a significant reduction in exchange rate hedging. Companies more exposed to climate change may invest significant resources to address climate change risk, such that they have fewer resources available for currency risk management. Additionally, firms seriously coping with climate change risk may view exchange rate risk as relatively less important in comparison to the risk posed by climate change. Notably, the authors also find that the negative effect of climate change exposure on currency hedging can be specifically attributed to the regulatory aspect of climate change risk rather than the physical dimension, suggesting that companies view the regulatory dimension of climate change as more critical.

Originality/value

Recent studies have demonstrated that climatic fluctuations represent one of the most recent sources of unpredictability, thereby impacting the economy and financial markets (Barnett et al., 2020; Bolton and Kacperczyk, 2020; Engle et al., 2020). The authors' study advances this field of research by revealing that company-specific exposure to climate change serves as a significant determinant of corporate currency hedging, thus expanding the existing knowledge base.

Keywords

Citation

Likitapiwat, T., Jiraporn, P. and Treepongkaruna, S. (2023), "Weathering exchange rates: estimating the effect of climate change vulnerability on foreign currency hedging using a text-based approach", Journal of Accounting Literature, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAL-06-2023-0107

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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