PhD Thesis Presentation - From Climate Policy to Market Risk: Green Bond Pricing, Carbon Risk Premium, and Greenwashing Risk 

11:30am - 12:30pm
Room 4503 (Lifts 25-26), 4/F Academic Building, HKUST

Supporting the below United Nations Sustainable Development Goals:支持以下聯合國可持續發展目標:支持以下联合国可持续发展目标:

This thesis examines the complex field of climate finance, focusing on the roles of policymakers, investors, and firms. It begins by exploring the implications of climate policy coordination for financial markets. The thesis first examines the Common Ground Taxonomy (CGT), which harmonises EU-China green taxonomy standards. The analysis reveals that CGT-aligned green bonds attract significantly more international capital and generate positive spillover effects in corporate green bond markets, demonstrating that cross-jurisdictional taxonomy alignment reduces information frictions and unlocks substantial pricing benefits for CGT-aligned issuers.

The thesis then investigates how corporate net-zero commitments (NZC) influence the carbon risk premium. It finds a robust positive carbon risk premium linked to GHG emission intensity. Critically, NZC represent a double-edged sword: firms with high transition readiness experience reduced carbon risk premiums post-NZC, while those lacking readiness face elevated premiums. These findings highlight the need for policymakers to support robust transition strategies.

Finally, the thesis develops a novel expenditure-based greenwashing risk measure. This forward-looking metric, which quantifies shortfalls between expected and actual environmental expenditures, captures better the genuine abatement commitment than existing outcome-based approaches used in the literature. High greenwashing risk might trigger inflows from institutional investors and spill over to the broader banking sector via green-loan-green-bond substitution. These findings advocate for enhanced monitoring mechanisms to safeguard the integrity of green finance instruments.

In conclusion, the thesis provides valuable insights and policy recommendations to strengthen the effectiveness and growth of climate finance. By linking policy design, firm behaviour, and investor responses, it provides a comprehensive framework for scaling credible climate finance while safeguarding financial stability.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Mr. Tsz Shing WAN

PhD student in the ESPM Program, supervised by Prof. Keith CHAN and Prof. Sunny HUANG

Language
English
Recommended For
Faculty and staff
PG students
UG students
Organizer
Division of Environment and Sustainability
Post an event
Campus organizations are invited to add their events to the calendar.