Abstract

This study investigates the integration of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) equity indices with conventional indices in Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (BRICS) individually and across all BRICS countries to better understand regional economic cooperation. Accordingly, we look at daily returns from 13 July 2013 to 28 February 2018 for the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) ESG indices and MSCI composite indices of the respective countries. To analyze the integration between the ESG equity indices of the sampled countries with their regional and across regional conventional counterparts, the Johansen Co-integration test is employed in this study. Further, the vector error correction model (VECM) is applied to test the causality between the sampled time-series. The impulse response function analysis further explains the impulse responses of each country’s MSCI ESG returns to one standard deviation of innovations to MSCI composite returns of the same country and across countries. Finally, the extent of the MSCI composite returns’ impact on the MSCI ESG returns in the same country indices, and cross-regional indices is examined with variance decomposition analysis. The results suggest that all ESG equity indices are integrated with conventional indices in all BRICS countries. Furthermore, there is a short-or long-run causality between MSCI ESG and MSCI composite equity indices of China and South Africa. Moreover, the study finds only short-run causality between conventional and non-conventional equity indices of Brazil and Russia, whereas we find only long-run causality between India’s non-conventional and conventional equity indices. Finally, the study finds that the all-individual country MSCI ESG equity indices shows a long-run causality with MSCI composite equity indices of all other BRICS countries. The findings also confirm the economic and financial cooperation between the BRICS countries.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe principle of responsible investment (PRI) paves the way for organizations to incorporate environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria into their investment strategies [1,2,3]

  • The results show that the average returns of all the conventional and ESG indices are positive except the Brazil Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) composite equity indices

  • The results suggest that the MSCI ESG equity index for Brazil exhibits a long-run cointegrated relationship with the MSCI composite equity index

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Summary

Introduction

The principle of responsible investment (PRI) paves the way for organizations to incorporate environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria into their investment strategies [1,2,3]. The concept of a socially responsible investing (SRI) considers investments in terms of ethical impact, as well as financial gains [2,6,7]. The burgeoning acceptability of ESG investing has generated the need for ESG indices and rating agencies. Such indices provide benchmark measures for investors to track the performance of their investments [4]. These indices help boost ESG investing, as well as the implementation of responsible investment

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