Abstract
We empirically study whether carbon emissions affect firms’ cost of capital raised on conventional bond markets. We find that firms with higher carbon emissions face higher spreads in the secondary market but not in the primary market. We show that this gap is related to uncertainty about climate concerns that affects differently primary and secondary market. This gap is also affected by the reputation of underwriting dealers: high reputation promotes the incorporation of climate concerns into bond yields. Our findings imply that, on average, carbon emissions do not affect the cost of capital in bond markets, thereby reducing firms’ financial incentives for decarbonization.
Keywords
Climate finance; Carbon premium; Bond markets; Green investors; Underwriting dealers;
JEL codes
- G12: Asset Pricing • Trading Volume • Bond Interest Rates
- G41:
Replaces
Sébastien Pouget, and Daniel Kim, “Do carbon emissions affect the cost of capital? Primary versus secondary corporate bond markets”, TSE Working Paper, n. 23-1472, September 2023, revised November 2025.
Reference
Daniel Kim, and Sébastien Pouget, “Do carbon emissions affect the cost of capital? Primary versus secondary corporate bond markets”, Journal of Corporate Finance, November 2025, forthcoming.
See also
Published in
Journal of Corporate Finance, November 2025, forthcoming
