Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: Torsten Ehlers Author-X-Name-First: Torsten Author-X-Name-Last: Ehlers Author-Name: Frank Packer Author-X-Name-First: Frank Author-X-Name-Last: Packer Author-Name: Kathrin de Greiff Author-X-Name-First: Kathrin Author-X-Name-Last: de Greiff Title: The pricing of carbon risk in syndicated loans: which risks are priced and why? Abstract: Do banks price the risks of climate policy change? Combining syndicated loan data with carbon intensity data (CO2 emissions relative to revenue) of borrowers across a wide range of industries, we find a significant "carbon premium" since the Paris Agreement. The loan risk premium related to CO2 emission intensity is apparent across industries and broader than that due simply to "stranded assets" in fossil fuel or other carbon-intensive industries. The price of risk, however, appears to be relatively low given the material risks faced by borrowers. Only carbon emissions directly caused by the firm (scope 1) are priced, and not the overall carbon footprint including indirect emissions. "Green" banks do not appear to price carbon risk differently from other banks. Length: 29 pages Creation-Date: 2021-06 File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work946.pdf File-Format: Application/pdf File-Function: Full PDF document File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work946.htm File-Format: text/html Number: 946 Keywords: environmental policy, climate policy risk, transition risk, loan pricing Classification-JEL: G2, Q01, Q5 Handle: RePEc:bis:biswps:946