Green Bond: A Systematic Literature Review for Future Research Agendas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Questions, Databases, and Appropriate Research Terms
2.2. Sample Screening Criteria
2.3. Sample Overview and Taxonomy
3. Results: Suggestions for Further Research
3.1. Greenium
3.2. Green Bond Connectedness with Other Financial Instruments
3.3. Green Bond and Stock Reaction
3.4. Green Bond—Supply-Side Analysis
3.5. Green Bond Market Performance Analysis
3.6. Other
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Author(s) | Year | Title | Journal | Taxonomy Group * |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alonso-Conde, A.B., Rojo-Suarez, J. | 2020 | On the Effect of Green Bonds on the Profitability and Credit Quality of Project Financing | Sustainability | 3 |
Bachelet, M.J.; Becchetti, L.; Manfredonia, S. | 2019 | The Green Bonds Premium Puzzle: The Role of Issuer Characteristics and Third-Party Verification | Sustainability | 1 |
Barua, S.; Chiesa, M. | 2019 | Sustainable financing practices through green bonds: What affects the funding size? | Business strategy and the environment | 3 |
Baulkaran, V. | 2019 | Stock market reaction to green bond issuance | Journal of Asset Management | 4 |
Broadstock, D.C.; Cheng, L.T.W. | 2019 | Time-varying relation between black and green bond price benchmarks: Macroeconomic determinants for the first decade | Finance Research Letters | 2 |
Chang, K.; Feng, Y.L., Liu, W.: Lu, N.; Li, S.Z., | 2021 | The impacts of liquidity measures and credit rating on corporate bond yield spreads: Evidence from China’s green bond market | Applied Economics Letters | 3 |
Chiesa, M.: Barua, S., | 2019 | The surge of impact borrowing: The magnitude and determinants of green bond supply and its heterogeneity across markets | Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment | 3 |
Daszynska-Zygadlo, K; Marszalek, J; Piontek, K | 2018 | Sustainable Finance Instruments’ Risk—Green Bond Market Analysis | Conference paper | 2 |
Deng, Z.; Tang, D.Y.; Zhang, Y. | 2020 | Is “greenness” priced in the market? Evidence from green bond issuance in China | Journal of Alternative Investments | 3 |
Dou, X.; Qi, S. | 2019 | The choice of green bond financing instruments | Cogent business and management | 3 |
Draksaite, A; Kazlauskiene, V; Melnyk, L. | 2018 | The Perspective of the Green Bonds as Novel Debt Instruments in Sustainable Economy | Conference paper | 2 |
Febi W.; Schäfer D.; Stephan A.; Sun C. | 2018 | The impact of liquidity risk on the yield spread of green bonds | Finance Research Letters | 1, 5 |
Gianfrate, G.; Peri M. | 2019 | The green advantage: Exploring the convenience of issuing green bonds | Journal of Cleaner Production | 1 |
Hachenberg, B.; Schiereck, D. | 2018 | Are green bonds priced differently from conventional bonds? | Journal of Asset Management | 1 |
Halkos, G.; Managi, S.; Tsilika, K. | 2020 | Ranking Countries and Geographical Regions in the International Green Bond Transfer Network: A Computational Weighted Network Approach | Computational Economics | 6 |
Hammoudeh, S.; Ajmi, A.N.; Mokni, K. | 2020 | Relationship between green bonds and financial and environmental variables: A novel time-varying causality | Energy Economics | 2 |
Huynh, T.L.D. | 2020 | When ‘green’ challenges’ prime’: Empirical evidence from government bond markets | Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment | 2 |
Huynh, T.L.D.; Hille, E.; Nasir, M.A. | 2020 | Diversification in the age of the 4th industrial revolution: The role of artificial intelligence, green bonds, and cryptocurrencies | Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 2 |
Hyun, S.; Park, D.; Tian, S. | 2020 | The price of going green: The role of greenness in green bond markets | Accounting and Finance | 1 |
Hyun, S.; Park, D.; Tian, S. | 2021 | Pricing of Green Labeling: A Comparison of Labelled and Unlabelled Green Bonds | Finance Research Letters | 3 |
Immel, M.; Hachenberg, B.; Kiesel, F.; Schiereck, D. | 2021 | Green bonds: Shades of green and brown | Journal of Asset Management | 1 |
Jakubik, P.; Uguz, S. | 2021 | Impact of green bond policies on insurers: Evidence from the European equity market | Journal of Economics and Finance | 4 |
Jin, J.; Han, L.; Wu, L; Zeng, H. | 2020 | The hedging effect of green bonds on carbon market risk | International Review of Financial Analysis | 2 |
Kanamura, T. | 2020 | Are green bonds environmentally friendly and good performing assets? | Energy Economics | 1, 2 |
Karpf, A; Mandel, A. | 2018 | The changing value of the ‘green’ label on the US municipal bond market | Nature climate change | 1 |
Larcker, D.F.; Watts, E.M. | 2020 | Where is the Greenium? | Journal of Accounting and Economics | 1 |
Lebelle, M.; Jarjir, SL.; Sassi, S. | 2020 | Corporate Green Bond Issuances: An International Evidence | Journal of risk and financial management | 4 |
Li, Z.; Tang, Y.; Wu, J.; Zhang, J.; Lv, Q. | 2020 | The Interest Costs of Green Bonds: Credit Ratings, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Certification | Emerging Markets Finance and Trade | 3 |
Liu, N.; Liu, C.; Da, B.; Zhang, T.; Guan, F. | 2021 | Dependence and risk spillovers between green bonds and clean energy markets | Journal of Cleaner Production | 2 |
Mohd Roslen, S.N.; Yee, L.S.; Binti Ibrahim, S.A. | 2017 | Green Bond and shareholders’ wealth: A multi-country event study | Journal of globalization and small business | 4 |
Monasterolo, I.; Raberto, M. | 2018 | The EIRIN Flow-of-funds Behavioral Model of Green Fiscal Policies and Green Sovereign Bonds | Ecological Economics | 6 |
Nanayakkara, K.G.M.; Colombage, S. | 2020 | Does compliance with Green Bond Principles bring any benefit to make the ‘Green economy plan’ of the G20 a reality? | Accounting and Finance | 3 |
Nanayakkara, M.; Colombage, S. | 2019 | Do investors in the Green Bond market pay a premium? Global evidence | Applied Economics | 1 |
Nguyen, T.T.H.; Naeem, M.A.; Balli, F.; Balli, H.O.; Vo X.V. | 2021 | Time-frequency co-movement among green bonds, stocks, commodities, clean energy, and conventional bonds | Finance Research Letters | 2 |
Park, D.; Park, J.; Ryu, D. | 2020 | Volatility Spillovers between Equity and Green Bond Markets | Sustainability | 2 |
Partridge C.; Medda, F.R. | 2020 | The evolution of pricing performance of green municipal bonds | Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment | 1 |
Pham, L. | 2016 | Is it risky to go green? A volatility analysis of the green bond market | Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment | 5 |
Pham, L.; Huynh, T.L.D. | 2020 | How does investor attention influence the green bond market? | Finance Research Letters | 5 |
Reboredo, J.C. | 2018 | Green bond and financial markets: Co-movement, diversification, and price spillover effects | Energy Economics | 2 |
Reboredo, J.C.; Ugolini, A. | 2020 | Price connectedness between green bond and financial markets | Economic Modelling | 2 |
Reboredo, J.C.; Ugolini, A.; Aiube, F.A.L. | 2020 | Network connectedness of green bonds and asset classes | Energy Economics | 2 |
Russo, A.; Mariani, M.; Caragnano, A. | 2021 | Exploring the determinants of green bond issuance: Going beyond the long-lasting debate on performance consequences | Business strategy and the environment | 3 |
Saeed, T.; Bouri, E.; Alsulami, H. | 2021 | Extreme return connectedness and its determinants between clean/green and dirty energy investments | Energy Economics | 2 |
Shaydurova, A.; Panova, S.; Fedosova, R.; Zlotnikova, G. | 2018 | Investment attractiveness of “Green” financial instruments | Journal of Reviews on Global Economics | 5 |
Tang, D.Y.; Zhang, Y. | 2020 | Do shareholders benefit from green bonds? | Journal of Corporate Finance | 1, 4 |
Tolliver, C.; Keeley, A.R.; Managi, S. | 2020-1 | Drivers of green bond market growth: The importance of Nationally Determined Contributions to the Paris Agreement and implications for sustainability | Journal of Cleaner Production | 6 |
Tolliver, C.; Keeley, A.R.; Managi, S. | 2020-2 | Policy targets behind green bonds for renewable energy: Do climate commitments matter? | Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 6 |
Tu, C.A.; Rasoulinezhad, E.; Sarker, T. | 2020 | Investigating solutions for the development of a green bond market: Evidence from the analytic hierarchy process | Finance Research Letters | 6 |
Tuhkanen, H.; Vulturius, G. | 2020 | Are green bonds funding the transition? Investigating the link between companies’ climate targets and green debt financing | Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment | 6 |
Wang J.; Chen X.; Li X.; Yu J.; Zhong R. | 2020 | The market reaction to green bond issuance: Evidence from China | Pacific-Basin Finance Journal | 1, 4 |
Wang, Q.H.; Zhou, Y.N.; Luo, L.; Ji, J.P. | 2019 | Research on the Factors Affecting the Risk Premium of China’s Green Bond Issuance | Sustainability | 3 |
Zerbib, O.D. | 2019 | The effect of pro-environmental preferences on bond prices: Evidence from green bonds | Journal of Banking and Finance | 1 |
Zhou, X.G.; Cui, Y.D. | 2019 | Green Bonds, Corporate Performance, and Corporate Social Responsibility | Sustainability | 4 |
1 | CBI (Climate Bond Initiative) is an international not-for-profit organization aiming to mobilize larger capital flows to green climate-aligned projects. CBI operates by providing market intelligence, standards, and policy recommendations. |
2 | ICMA (International Capital Market Association) is a not-for-profit association composed of private and public financial actors, such as banks, asset managers, investment funds, central banks, law firms, etc. The main objective is to assist capital/security market participants, promote market good practices and standards, etc. From the starting coalition of four institutions (Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citi, Credit Agricole and JP Morgan), ICMA now (as of the end of March 2020) counts on 600 Members in 62 countries. |
3 | According to ICMA, green bonds are any fixed income financial instruments where the proceeds will be exclusively used to finance (or re-finance) new (and/or existing) green projects where green projects are related to the followed field: Renewable energy, energy efficiency, pollution prevention, clean transportation, sustainable water management, etc. (ICMA 2018, Green Bond Principles). |
4 | The state of Massachusetts issued the first municipal green bond in July 2013. The first corporate green bond was issued by “Electricite de France” in November 2013. |
5 | In the same year, various green bond market indices were launched to sign the market progress contributing to the development of the market (Jones et al. 2020). |
6 | Scopus’s SCImago Journal Rank is a scientific influence index alternative to Impact Factor. The SJR measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the subject field and prestige (SJR) of the citing journal. |
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Green Bond Type | Key Features |
---|---|
Use-of-Proceeds Bond |
|
Use-of-Proceeds Revenue Bond |
|
Project Bond |
|
Securitized Bond |
|
Agency (Acronyms) | Year (Version) | Initiative | External Review | Use of Proceeds Allocation |
---|---|---|---|---|
International Capital Market Association (ICMA) | 2014 (v 1) | Green Bond Principles | Voluntary | Do not provide a close taxonomy of eligible green areas |
2018 (v 2) | ||||
Climate Bond Initiative (CBI) | 2015 (v 2.0) | Climate Bond Standard | Mandatory | Climate Bond Taxonomy |
2017 (v 2.1) | ||||
2019 (v 3.0) | ||||
EU Commission | December 2019 | EU Green Bond Standard | Mandatory |
|
People’s Bank of China (PBOC) | June 2020 | China Green Bond Endorsed Project Catalogue | Voluntary, recommended | Official list of eligible green areas (China Green Bond Endorsed Project Catalogue) |
ASEAN Capital Market Forum (ACMF) | 2018 | ASEAN Green Bond Standards | Voluntary, recommended | Do not provide a close taxonomy of eligible green areas |
Title | Authors | Topic | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|
Survey of Green Bond Pricing and Investment Performance | Liaw (2020) | Green bond premium | Not a standardized literature selection model |
Is there a green premium in the green bond market? Systematic literature review revealing premium determinants | MacAskill et al. (2021) | Green bond premium | Systematic literature review |
Group | Number of Articles |
---|---|
1. Greenium | 14 |
2. Green bond connectedness with other financial instruments 1 | 15 |
3. Green bond—supply-side analysis | 11 |
4. Green bond and stock reaction 2 | 7 |
5. Green bond market performance analysis 3 | 4 |
6. Other | 6 |
Author(s) (Year) | Characteristics of the Sample | Methodology | Main Results | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time Span | Geographical Scope | Sample Size | Market Segment | Methods | Size-Effect Type | Greenium Evidence | Premium Dimension | Level of Statistical Significance | |
Febi et al. (2018) | 2013–2016 | UK e Lux | 64 | Secondary market | Fixed effect panel regression model | Credit spread (difference between green bond yield and government bond yield) | Controversial | −69.2 bps in 2016 | 10% in 2016 no significance other years |
Hachenberg and Schiereck (2018) | 2015–2016 | World | 63 | Secondary market | Matching method, yield curve, Wilcoxon test, Panel regression model | Spread between green bonds and similar conventional bonds | Controversial | −1.18 bps (entire sample) | no significance |
Karpf and Mandel (2018) | 2010–2016 | US | 1880 | Secondary market | Yield curve, Mixed regression model, Oaxaca—Blinder decomposition | Yield to call (yield to maturity priced out the value of this option attached) | Yes | −7.8 bps (part of premium explained by green purpose) | n.a. |
Bachelet et al. (2019) | 2013–2017 | World | 89 | Secondary market | Matching method, Regression model (OLS, FE) | Spread between green bond ask yield and matched conventional bond ask yields | Controversial | +5 bps (entire sample) −4 bps (subsample government/institution issuers) | 1% |
Gianfrate and Peri (2019) | 2013–2017 | EU | 121 | Primary and secondary market | Propensity score matching | Secondary market yield bond spread | Yes | between −5 and −13 bps (on average depending on temporal windows of the study) | different significance levels |
Nanayakkara and Colombage (2019) | 2016–2017 | World | 82 | Secondary market | Panel data regression with hybrid model | Daily option adjusted spread (OAS) | Yes | −63 bps | 1% |
Zerbib (2019) | 2013–2017 | World | 110 | Secondary market | Matching method, Fixed effect panel regression | Daily ask yield between green bonds and synthetic conventional bonds | Yes | −2 bps (in the entire sample) | 1% |
Hyun et al. (2020) | 2010–2017 | World | 60 | Secondary market | Matching method, OLS, and fixed effects generalized least squares (FEGLS) regression model | Liquidity-adjusted ask yield spread between green bonds and paired conventional bonds | Controversial | −6 bps (in case of third party verification) −15 bps (in case of CBI certification) | 1% |
Kanamura (2020) | 2014–2018 | World | n.a. | Secondary market | Risk-Expected return model | Market indexes | Yes | n.a. | n.a. |
Larcker and Watts (2020) | 2013—2018 | US | 640 | Primary market | Matching method, kernel density estimator, Nearest neighbors matching, Wilcoxon test | Initial offering credit spread | no | +0.5 bps (but in 85% of the cases yield spread is null) | 1% |
Partridge and Medda (2020) | 2013–2018 | US | 453 | Primary market | Matching method, Yield curve, Panel regression model | Initial yields at issue | Controversial | −0.1 bps (in 2018) | no significance |
Secondary market | Daily traded market yields | Yes | −4 bps (entire sample) | 1% | |||||
Tang and Zhang (2020) | 2007–2017 | World | 1510 | Primary market | Matching method, Regression model, Diff-in-diff analysis | Yield spread at the issuance | Controversial | −6.94 bps (entire sample) no pricing difference when issuer’s characteristics are considered | 5% |
Wang et al. (2020) | 2016–2019 | China | 159 | Primary market | Matching method, univariate and multivariate analysis | Credit spread (spread between the “at-issue green bond yield” and the yield on a treasury security of comparable maturity) | Yes | −34 bps | 1% |
Immel et al. (2021) | 2007–2019 | World | 466 | Secondary market | OLS regression | Secondary market yield bond spread | Yes | between −8 and −14 bps | 1% |
Author(s) (Year) | Time Span | Geographical Scope | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|
Daszyńska-Żygadło et al. (2018) | 2014–2018 | World | Multivariate Garch framework |
Draksaite et al. (2018) | 2007–2016 | EU | Covariation and regression based analysis |
Reboredo (2018) | 10/2014–08/2017 | World | Time-invariant and time-varying copula approaches |
Broadstock and Cheng (2019) | 28/11/2008–31/7/2018 | US | Dynamic conditional correlations (DCC), dynamic model averaging (DMA) |
Reboredo and Ugolini (2020) | 10/2014–06/2019 | World | Structural VAR (Vector Autoregressive) model parameters |
Hammoudeh et al. (2020) | 6/2014–2/2020 | World | Time-varying Granger causality test |
Huynh et al. (2020) | 12/2017–01/2020 | World | Tail dependence as copulas, volatility interconnectedness via the Generalized Forecast Error Variance Decomposition |
Huynh (2020) | 12/2008–11/2019 | World | Copulas modelling approach |
Jin et al. (2020) | 12/2008–12/2018 | World | Dynamic hedge ratio models: DCC-APGARCH, DCC-T-GARCH, and DCC-GJRGARCH models |
Kanamura (2020) | 11/2014–12/2018 | World | Structural price model, Dynamic conditional correlation (DCC) model |
Liu et al. (2021) | 07/2011–2/2020 | World | Time-invariant and time-varying copula approaches with CoVaR |
Nguyen et al. (2021) | 12/2008–12/2019 | World | Rolling window wavelet correlation approach |
Park et al. (2020) | 01/2010–01/2020 | World | BEKK model, dynamic conditional correlation-generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (DCC-GARCH) model |
Reboredo et al. (2020) | 10/2014–12/2018 | US, EU | Wavelet analysis, Structural VAR (Vector Autoregressive) model parameters |
Saeed et al. (2021) | 01/2012–11/2019 | US | Quantile based VAR model |
Author(s) (Year) | Time Span | Geographical Scope | Sample Size | Type of Green Bond (and Issuer) Analyzed | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mohd Roslen et al. (2017) | 2010–07/2015 | World | 156 GB issuances and 118 GB issuance announcements | Listed issuer (financial institutions and non-financial issuers with extraordinary finance operations were excluded) | Event study analysis of average abnormal return (AAR) and cumulative abnormal return (CAR) |
Baulkaran (2019) | n.d. | World | 54 GB issuers | Listed corporate GB issuer, with height market capitalization | Event study method; regression analysis |
Zhou and Cui (2019) | 2016–2019 | China | 144 GB issuances, 70 Chinese listed issuers | All types of listed issuers (financial and non-financial, private and public); only long-term issuances are considered | Event study approach, propensity score matching (PSM), difference-in-differences (DID) |
Jakubik and Uguz (2021) | 2012–2019 | EU | 15 issuers | Listed EU Insurance company with GB policy | OLS regression |
Lebelle et al. (2020) | 2009–2018 | World | 475 GB issuances, 145 GB issuers | Private, listed GB issuers (financial and non-financial); securitized GB excluded | Event study method CAPM, Fama-French three-factor model, Carhart four-factor model |
Tang and Zhang (2020) | 2007–2017 | World | 1510 GB issuances, 132 GB issuers | Private, listed GB issuers | Event study analysis and cumulative abnormal return (CAR) |
Wang et al. (2020) | 01/2016–06/2019 | China | 159 GB issuances, 56 GB issuers | Listed, private (non-financial), rated and Chinese GB issuers | Matching method, Zerbib method—event study method |
Author(s) (Year) | Time Span | Geographical Scope | Sample Size | Green Bond (and Issuer) Type | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barua and Chiesa (2019) | 2010–2017 | World | 771 GB | All types | Cross-sectional OLS regression |
Chiesa and Barua (2019) | 2010–2017 | World | 771 GB | All types | Cross-sectional OLS regression, Blinder–Oaxaca Decomposition |
Dou and Qi (2019) | 2016–2018 | China | 308 GB | Corporate issuers, medium and long-term maturity green bonds | Logit model and maximum likelihood estimation method |
Wang et al. (2019) | 1/2016–12/2018 | China | 305 GB | ABS and project green bonds excluded | Multivariate statistical regression analysis on cross-sectional data |
Alonso-Conde and Rojo-Suárez (2020) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Business case (Sagunto regasification plant) |
Deng et al. (2020) | 2016–2018 | China | 163 GB | All types | OLS regression |
Hyun et al. (2021) | 01/2014–12/2017 | World | 3578 GB | All types | Propensity score matching (PSM) OLS regression |
Li et al. (2020) | 01/2016–09/2018 | China | 114 GB | Listed green bonds | OLS regression |
Nanayakkara and Colombage (2021) | 2007–2016 | G-20 countries | 399 GB | Supranational issuers excluded | Cross-sectional regression |
Chang et al. (2021) | 01/2018–12/2019 | China | 112 GB | Corporate issuers | Panel data regression and generalized method of moments (GMM) |
Russo et al. (2021) | 2013–2016 | World | 306 GB | Corporate issuers | GLS regression |
Author(s) (Year) | Time Span | Geographical Scope | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|
Pham (2016) | 30/4/2010–29/4/2015 | World | Multivariate GARCH |
Febi et al. (2018) | 2013–2016 | UK and Lussemburgo | Two-factor model; LOT liquidity measure; OLS panel regression |
Shaydurova et al. (2018) | 12/2015–5/2018 | World | Standard analysis of the performance of the indices; VAR model |
Pham and Huynh (2020) | 10/2014–11/2019 | World | Univariate analysis; GARCH models; Covariance stationary VAR model |
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Cortellini, G.; Panetta, I.C. Green Bond: A Systematic Literature Review for Future Research Agendas. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14120589
Cortellini G, Panetta IC. Green Bond: A Systematic Literature Review for Future Research Agendas. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(12):589. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14120589
Chicago/Turabian StyleCortellini, Giuseppe, and Ida Claudia Panetta. 2021. "Green Bond: A Systematic Literature Review for Future Research Agendas" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 12: 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14120589
APA StyleCortellini, G., & Panetta, I. C. (2021). Green Bond: A Systematic Literature Review for Future Research Agendas. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(12), 589. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14120589