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Deregulation of short-selling and green innovation of enterprises: quasi-natural experiment of margin trading policy

Xiuying Chen (School of Economics and Trade, Guangdong University of Finance, Guangzhou, China)
Jiahong Zhu (School of Economics, Jinan University, Guangzhou, China)
Sheng Liu (Institute of Studies for the Greater Bay Area, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou, China)

Nankai Business Review International

ISSN: 2040-8749

Article publication date: 22 December 2023

236

Abstract

Purpose

The reform and opening-up of capital market is valued for promoting sustainable development, while its impact presented as the form of deregulation of short-selling on the green innovation of enterprises in developing countries remains unclear. The purpose of this study is to outline the significance of gradual reform of financial markets in developing countries for low-carbon transformation and provide implications for achieving carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals.

Design/methodology/approach

Based on the green subdivided patent data and financial data of China’s A-share listed companies, this paper takes the implementation of securities margin trading program as a quasi-natural experiment and applies the difference-in-differences (DID) model to examine the impact of deregulation of short-selling constraints on the enterprises’ green transformation.

Findings

The findings reveal that the initiating securities margin trading program significantly enhances the green innovation performance of enterprises. These findings are valid after performing a series of robustness tests such as the parallel trend test, the placebo test and the methods to exclude other policy interference. Mechanism analyses demonstrate a two-faceted effect of the securities margin trading program on the green innovation of enterprises, in which short-selling policy increases the pressure on capital market deregulation and meanwhile induces the environmental protection investment. The heterogeneity results demonstrate that the impulsive effect imposed by securities margin trading program is more significant in experimental group samples with characteristics of lower financing constraints, belonging to heavy polluting industries and possessing better environmental supervision capability.

Originality/value

First, previous studies have focused on the impact of financial policies implemented by banking institutions on the green innovation of enterprises, but few literatures have explored the validity of relaxing short-selling restrictions or opening the capital market in the field of enterprise’s green transformation in developing country. From the view of securities market reform, this paper broadens the incentive and supervision effects of the relaxation of short-selling control on enterprise’s green innovation performance after the implementation of securities financing and securities lending policy in China’s capital market. Second, previous studies have explored the impact of command-and-control environmental regulations, as well as market-incentivized environmental regulations such as green finance, low-carbon pilots and environmental tax reform, on the green transition of enterprises. Recently the role of the securities market in the green development of enterprises has received more attention in academia. The pilot of margin financing and securities lending is essentially a market-incentivized regulatory tool, but there is few in-depth research on how it affects the green innovation of enterprises. This paper enriches the research on whether the market incentive financial regulation policy can contribute to the green transformation of enterprises under the Porter hypothesis. Third, some previous studies used the ordinary panel regression model to explore the impact of financial policy on enterprise’s innovation performance. However, due to the potential endogenous problems of the estimated model, it might get biased conclusions. Therefore, based on the method of quasi-natural experiment, this paper selects the margin trading pilot policy as an exogenous shock to solve the endogenous or reverse causality problem in traditional measurement model and applies the DID model to study the relationship between core indicator variables.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the funding of Guangdong Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project “Digital Empowerment and Global Value Chain Climbing in Manufacturing Industry: Theoretical Logic and Guangdong Practice” (GD22YYJ16), Guangdong Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project “Digital Transformation and Green Development of Guangdong Enterprises: Theoretical Logic and Empirical Evidence” (GD23GJ113), the 14th Five Year Plan for the Development of Philosophy and Social Sciences in Guangzhou “Research on Building a Modern Service Industry Strong City in Guangzhou: Based on the Perspective of Digital Transformation and Collaborative Governance” (2022GZQN06), the 2023 Philosophy and Social Sciences Planning Project in Zhuhai (2023YBB027, 2023YBB037) and the 2023 College Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Program (S202311846022).

Citation

Chen, X., Zhu, J. and Liu, S. (2023), "Deregulation of short-selling and green innovation of enterprises: quasi-natural experiment of margin trading policy", Nankai Business Review International, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/NBRI-06-2023-0054

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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