What is the extent of the impact of a firm's environmental performance on credit risk and its ability to obtain financing ?
Sougnez, Aurélie
Promotor(s) :
Prunier, Laurent
Date of defense : 1-Sep-2025/5-Sep-2025 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/24054
Details
| Title : | What is the extent of the impact of a firm's environmental performance on credit risk and its ability to obtain financing ? |
| Author : | Sougnez, Aurélie
|
| Date of defense : | 1-Sep-2025/5-Sep-2025 |
| Advisor(s) : | Prunier, Laurent
|
| Committee's member(s) : | Mernier, Lorren
|
| Language : | English |
| Number of pages : | 17237 |
| Keywords : | [en] Environmental Performance [en] Credit Risk [en] Financing policies [en] Altman Z-score [en] Credit Rating [en] Emissions [en] Resource Use [en] Environmental Innovation [en] Sustainability [en] European Firms |
| Discipline(s) : | Business & economic sciences > Finance |
| Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
| Degree: | Master en sciences de gestion, à finalité spécialisée en Banking and Asset Management |
| Faculty: | Master thesis of the HEC-Ecole de gestion de l'Université de Liège |
Abstract
[en] This thesis investigates the extent to which firm-level environmental performance influences credit risk and
financing outcomes, focusing on a large sample of European firms from 2015 to 2024. Building on the
frameworks of Wang and Yang (2023) and Huang, Kerstein, and Wang (2018), the study disaggregates
environmental performance into three dimensions : emissions, resource use, and environmental innovation
, to identify which aspects are most relevant to financial outcomes.
Credit risk is assessed using both the Altman Z-score and Refinitiv’s Combined Credit Rating, while financing
outcomes are analyzed through profitability, earnings stability, and financial policy decisions.
The results reveal three main insights. First, environmental performance exhibits little association with
accounting-based credit risk. Neither emissions nor resource efficiency significantly affect the Altman Z-
score, while environmental innovation shows a negative relationship, possibly reflecting the short-term
financial burden of innovation investments. Propensity score matching confirms that environmental
performance does not significantly influence Z-scores, suggesting that traditional distress metrics capture
limited environmental effects.
Second, credit ratings are more sensitive to environmental performance. Resource efficiency consistently
correlates with stronger ratings, while environmental innovation also contributes positively in several
specifications. In contrast, emissions scores show only weak or inconsistent effects. Subsample analysis
focusing on French firms highlights how institutional homogeneity improves explanatory power and restores
the expected influence of financial controls, emphasizing that cross-country heterogeneity may obscure
underlying relationships.
Third, environmental performance shapes certain financing policies but has limited impact on short-term
financial performance. Firms with stronger emissions management obtain more long-term debt, innovators
appear to rely less on debt and more on cash buffers, and resource-efficient firms hold lower liquidity
reserves. However, profitability and operating cash flows remain largely unaffected, indicating that
environmental practices influence financing structures rather than immediate financial outcomes.
Overall, the findings suggest that while environmental performance is not yet fully reflected in accounting-
based measures of credit risk, it plays a meaningful role in shaping credit ratings and financing policies. The
results support two hypotheses: (i) a timing hypothesis, whereby environmental innovation entails upfront
costs but strengthens longer-term creditworthiness; and (ii) a heterogeneity hypothesis, whereby effects
depend on institutional and sectoral contexts.
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