ESG and Its Components: Impact on Stock Returns Across Firm Sizes in Europe and the United States
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A longstanding debate in finance concerns the impact of social responsibility actions on firms¿ long-term profitability. This study provides a broad analysis on the relationship between ESG, its components, and stock returns. Using a dataset that spans from December 2014 to December 2023, this research analyzes an annual average of around 2260 publicly traded companies from Europe and the United States. The findings consistently show a negative link between ESG ratings, their components, and stock returns, a result that is possibly explainable by the mixed effect of a reduction of risk (lower risk premium) from social responsibility, and lower profitability from associated costs. The coefficients for ESG and its pillars in explaining stock returns are generally consistent, with a few exceptions for the environmental and governance components. The environmental pillar has a stronger influence in Europe, across firm sizes, while in the US, the effect is limited to larger companies. For governance, variations align with differing ownership structures across regions and changing investor priorities as firms grow, with stronger influence in Midcaps of both regions and in U.S. Large Caps. The effects of overall ESG scores and individual pillars on stock returns across regions, firm sizes, and their interaction, provide a more comprehensive perspective on their relationship. © 2026 by the authors.
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