Article

The moral preferences of investors: Experimental evidence. Journal of Financial Economics

Jean-François Bonnefon, Augustin Landier, Parinitha Sastry et David Thesmar

Résumé

We characterize investors’ moral preferences in a parsimonious experimental setting, where we auction stocks with various ethical features. We find strong evidence that investors seek to align their investments with their social values (“value alignment”), and find no evidence of behavior driven by the social impact of investment decisions (“impact-seeking preferences”). First, the willingness to pay (WTP) for a stock is an increasing and quasi-linear function of corporate externalities. Second, this WTP does not change when corporate externalities are made contingent on investors buying the auctioned stock. Our results are thus compatible with a utility-maximization model where non-pecuniary benefits of firms’ externalities only accrue through stock ownership, not through the actual impact of investment decisions. Finally, the ability to directly contribute to the externality (by donating) does not reduce the willingness to pay for virtuous stocks.

Mots-clés

Portfolio choice; Externalities; Behavioral finance; ESG investing;

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Publié dans

Journal of Financial Economics, vol. 163, n° 103955, janvier 2025