It is worth comparing how markets performed in response to COP26 with how markets performed after the Paris Agreement was adopted in December 2015.
A Bank of England (BoE) analysis from 2016 found that “these events had a negative but statistically insignificant effect on the abnormal returns for oil and gas companies, but a positive and significant effect for renewable energy companies”.3 This stands in contrast to COP26, where the effect on oil and gas companies seems to have been stronger than for renewable energy.
What might explain this effect?
Policy levers to address climate change can broadly be divided into two types: carrots, that support green activities; or sticks, that punish polluting ones.
A simple read would suggest that the market post-Paris Agreement believed that policymakers would come bearing carrots rather than sticks, and therefore saw opportunities for clean technologies, but was slower to price in additional downside risk for fossil fuel companies. The BoE, for example, considered that one reason was “that investors may be uncertain about both the future course of climate-related policies and their impact on the value of fossil fuel companies”.
However, the new narrative around net zero and increasing policy action, such as the EU’s Fit for 55 package4, seems to underscore that policymakers are increasingly willing to use sticks to help to achieve their carbon reduction goals, making the transition risks for holding polluting companies more palpable for investors.
Of course, there are a myriad of other factors that influence market dynamics, and it would be simplistic to suggest that expectations around future policy action are the sole or even determinant factor at play.
However, it is clear that COP26 is the latest stop on this long journey to achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement, and reinforces the overall trend of shrinking cost of equity for green stocks and the growing cost of equity for brown stocks.
To further this momentum, we think it is essential that governments quickly turn promises made at COP26 into action.