The world’s stock markets hold mining companies to account for human rights violations, especially when they take action against their opposition, new international research by Monash University and Oxford University has highlighted.
The assassination of environmental activists related to mining activities has shown to deliver average share market losses of associated mining companies of more than $130 million (US$100 million) in the 10 days following the event. However, this depreciation in share value only impacts companies named or implicated in such negative events.
Researchers found that publicising abuses has a significant negative impact on the market performance of mining companies, with cumulative falls of more than 2 percentage points observed roughly 10 days after the incident occurred.
Since 1998, nearly 500 people have died because of 354 killing events associated with local opposition against mining projects. More than one-quarter of fatalities have occurred in the Philippines, while Peru, India, Guatemala and Colombia are also dangerous countries for environmental activists.
In this world-first empirical study on how global stock markets react to mining companies associated with high-profile human rights abuses, researchers found negative media coverage also contributed to these sudden financial declines and divestment by investors.
The study found negative returns from assassinations were stronger during periods of slow news cycles compared to when coinciding with competing newsworthy events. Moreover, researchers found activist assassinations correlated to royalties paid by firms to domestic governments.
Collecting and coding more than 20 years of data on assassination events, the team used ‘Event Study Methodology’ to examine how publicity of these events impacts the asset prices of firms associated with abuse.
This ground-breaking analysis is a joint project between Associate Professor Paul Raschky from the Monash Business School and SoDA Labs; David Kreitmeir, a PhD student in the Monash Business School, and Associate Professor Nathaniel Lane from the University of Oxford.
Associate Professor Raschky detailed that since 2002, more global environmental activists have been killed than Australian or UK soldiers in war zones.
“These abuses, and those involved, are the focus of global publicity campaigns by human rights groups and the media,” he said.
“Multinational companies are sometimes connected with human rights violations at the global periphery. In the absence of legal frameworks that govern corporate misbehaviour abroad, global civil society, including activists, human rights groups and the media, are often the only institution to hold large multinational corporations accountable for their misbehaviour.”
“Oftentimes, these tragedies get swept under the rug by governments and media outlets due to competing interests and financial investments. Our research shows that extreme actions taken by multinationals against civil society have long-term financial and social repercussions,” Associate Professor Raschky shared.
Using hundreds of data samples, the researchers found no evidence of abnormal returns for companies on the days leading up to assassination attempts.
On the day of an assassination, researchers observed little market reaction, followed the next day by a (borderline) significant effect of around -0.7 percentage points.
This initial reaction was followed by a stable decline the next four days and a steep – and robustly significant – decline from day five through day 10 after the event.
“These results indicate two key findings. First, our event study results are not merely picking up a downward pre-trend in the asset prices for those companies associated with violence. Second, the factual or expected disclosure of a company’s role in the assassination event seems to be at the root of the estimated effect,” Mr Kreitmeir said.
“The negative impact on publicly-traded firms is economically significant. We estimate the median 10-day cumulative loss in market capitalisation is more than $130 million (US$100 million). And these financial impacts accumulate through time.”
The researchers also found that institutional investors that follow event-based trading strategies, such as hedge funds, withdraw funds from mining companies following assassinations – sometimes by as much as 16.5 per cent.
“We believe that our results can build the foundation for a novel and important research stand on the political economy of multinational operations and the role of civil society in governing transnational corporate activities,” Associate Professor Lane said.
“Our findings show that informational campaigns by civil society have, in fact, an impact on multinational corporations and being linked to human rights abuses can significantly influence an associated company’s stock market value.”
For more information about this research, please visit monash.edu/business/soda-labs/home.
To download a copy of the research, please visit https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/aw7sq/.