Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) is a process that manages all risks in an integrated, holistic fashion by controlling and coordinating offsetting risks across the enterprise. This research investigates whether the adoption of the ERM approach affects firms’ cost of equity capital. We restrict our analysis to the U.S. insurance industry to control for unobservable differences in business models and risk exposures across industries. We simultaneously model firms’ adoption of ERM and the effect of ERM on the cost of capital. We find that ERM adoption significantly reduces firm’s cost of capital. Our results suggest that cost of capital benefits are one answer to the question how ERM can create value.
Source
American Risk and Insurance Association
Length of Resource
43 pages
Resource File
Date Published
Publication Type
paper
Resource Type
academic