This study aims to investigate the nexus between corporate sustainability performance, Fintech and COVID-19 by examining how COVID-19 has impacted Fintech firms’ environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance. The study further examines the long-term effects on ESG performance post-pandemic, to shed more light on the persistence of firms’ commitment towards sustainability in a post-pandemic world.
The sample includes all Fintech firms listed in the STOXX Global FinTech Index over the period 2014–2023. Fixed-effects regression analyses are conducted to examine this relationship, controlling for other firm characteristics. To further ensure results validity, the two-stage least squares estimation method is also used.
This paper find that Fintech firms exhibit better ESG/pillar performance during COVID-19, supporting the view that firms tend to maintain or enhance their sustainability practices. Interestingly, the findings also reveal that Fintech firms could maintain and even improve their ESG/pillar performance after the pandemic, indicating that these changes are lasting, not merely short-term adaptations during the hard times of the crisis.
For practitioners and firms, the results allow for a better understanding of Fintech firms’ tendency towards sustainability practices, especially in a post-pandemic world. For investors, the findings help get insights into the drivers of the sustainability behavior of Fintech firms in response to the pandemic.
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this paper is one of the first attempts to investigate how COVID-19 affects Fintech firms’ engagement in sustainability/ESG activities to extend both the increasingly growing literature on sustainability and the literature that focuses on Fintech and its role in a today’s world.
