TY - JOUR
T1 - Green signaling or greenwashing? ESG disclosure, firm performance and capital allocation in BRICS equity markets
AU - David, Lemuel Kenneth
AU - Wang, Jianling
AU - Luo, Meiling
AU - Cisse, Idrissa I.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Lemuel Kenneth David, Jianling Wang, Meiling Luo and Idrissa I. Cisse
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Purpose – This study investigates whether environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosures are priced in capital markets and influence institutional investment in BRICS countries. It explores whether the credibility and financial impact of ESG signals depend on national governance quality. Design/methodology/approach – Using a panel dataset of 900 firms across Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (2015–2023), the study employs fixed effects and interaction models to evaluate the impact of ESG disclosure on firm valuation (measured through Tobin's Q as a market-based performance indicator and ROA as an operational performance indicator) and capital allocation (institutional ownership changes). It further disaggregates ESG into subdimensions and conducts robustness checks across governance environments. Findings – ESG disclosures are positively associated with firm valuation and institutional capital allocation, but primarily in countries with higher governance quality. Environmental scores exert the strongest and most consistent influence. Interaction models confirm that governance strength enhances the signaling power of ESG, while weak institutions dilute market responses. Research limitations/implications – The analysis is limited to disclosure-based metrics; future studies should assess whether ESG signals translate into real-world sustainability outcomes. Practical implications – Investors should tailor ESG strategies to institutional contexts to avoid misallocations in low-governance settings. Originality/value – The article advances signaling and institutional theory by showing that ESG's financial impact is conditional, not universal. It challenges assumptions of ESG homogeneity and offers a context-sensitive framework for understanding sustainable finance in emerging markets.
AB - Purpose – This study investigates whether environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosures are priced in capital markets and influence institutional investment in BRICS countries. It explores whether the credibility and financial impact of ESG signals depend on national governance quality. Design/methodology/approach – Using a panel dataset of 900 firms across Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (2015–2023), the study employs fixed effects and interaction models to evaluate the impact of ESG disclosure on firm valuation (measured through Tobin's Q as a market-based performance indicator and ROA as an operational performance indicator) and capital allocation (institutional ownership changes). It further disaggregates ESG into subdimensions and conducts robustness checks across governance environments. Findings – ESG disclosures are positively associated with firm valuation and institutional capital allocation, but primarily in countries with higher governance quality. Environmental scores exert the strongest and most consistent influence. Interaction models confirm that governance strength enhances the signaling power of ESG, while weak institutions dilute market responses. Research limitations/implications – The analysis is limited to disclosure-based metrics; future studies should assess whether ESG signals translate into real-world sustainability outcomes. Practical implications – Investors should tailor ESG strategies to institutional contexts to avoid misallocations in low-governance settings. Originality/value – The article advances signaling and institutional theory by showing that ESG's financial impact is conditional, not universal. It challenges assumptions of ESG homogeneity and offers a context-sensitive framework for understanding sustainable finance in emerging markets.
KW - BRICS markets
KW - Capital allocation
KW - ESG disclosure
KW - Emerging markets finance
KW - Firm valuation
KW - Governance quality
KW - Institutional ownership
KW - Market-based ESG response
KW - Panel data analysis
KW - Refinitiv ESG scores
KW - Sustainability signaling
KW - Tobin's Q
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024426198
U2 - 10.1108/JCMS-06-2025-0080
DO - 10.1108/JCMS-06-2025-0080
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105024426198
SN - 2514-4774
SP - 1
EP - 22
JO - Journal of Capital Markets Studies
JF - Journal of Capital Markets Studies
ER -