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Who can realize the “spot value” of corporate social responsibility? Evidence from Chinese investors’ profiles

Shiyu Wang (Department of Economics and Management, Soochow University, Suzhou, China and Department of Business, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA)
Yan Zhang (Department of Business, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, California, USA)
Guanzhen Wang (Shenwan Hongyuan Securities Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China)
Zhibin Chen (Department of Economics and Management, Southeast University, Nanjing, China)

Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal

ISSN: 2040-8021

Article publication date: 5 February 2020

Issue publication date: 21 May 2020

499

Abstract

Purpose

This paper answers, in the Chinese stock market, who can realize the “spot value” of corporate social responsibility (CSR).

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use event-study to build the research framework. Using CSR report content analysis, the authors measure the specification level of CSR disclosure. Applying the Baidu index, the authors mine Chinese investors’ profiles data to investigate retail investor heterogeneity closely.

Findings

The authors find strong evidence that the measure captures a behavioral bias in CSR pricing: firms that choose to disclose CSR report experience positive abnormal return more among retail investors than institutional investors, more among young investors than older, but no difference between female and male investors.

Practical implications

For Chinese public firms, the authors give them evidence that they can realize positive abnormal returns by applying certain CSR disclosure strategies. For Chinese investors, especially retail investors and youths, the authors ask them to rethink whether their positive evaluation of CSR is a rational trade-off choice or whether they are fooled by the “hedging mask” and “attention-grabbing.”

Social implications

The findings can give some suggestions to regulators: encouraging voluntary disclosure and reducing mandatory disclosure can drive enterprises to engage in more CSR activities because the voluntarily CSR disclosure can realize both long-term value and “spot value.” Complementarily, a more rigorous CSR report auditing regulation can suppress the “greenwash” by increasing the “lying cost.”

Originality/value

Using behavioral finance theory, the authors connect the gap between neoclassical research on the “U-shaped” value realization of CSR and the increasing voluntary CSR disclosure in the Chinese market. The authors find that heuristic reason and emotionality orientation results in the Chinese “CSR-friendly” market.

Keywords

Citation

Wang, S., Zhang, Y., Wang, G. and Chen, Z. (2020), "Who can realize the “spot value” of corporate social responsibility? Evidence from Chinese investors’ profiles", Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal, Vol. 11 No. 4, pp. 717-743. https://doi.org/10.1108/SAMPJ-02-2019-0031

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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