Climate litigation as a financial risk: Evidence from a global survey of equity investors
This report surveys 811 global equity investors to assess perceptions of climate litigation as a financial risk. It finds that investors view climate lawsuits as financially material, with effects often manifesting early, such as upon media coverage or filing, and affecting both carbon majors and other sectors.
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OVERVIEW
Introduction
Climate litigation is expanding rapidly in scale and legal complexity. Despite this, its financial consequences remain underexplored in finance. This paper provides systematic evidence on how investors perceive climate litigation risk through a global online survey of 811 equity investors and analysts, primarily in North America and Europe, to understand how beliefs shape asset prices and capital allocation.
Survey design and implementation
The target population included investment professionals responsible for equity portfolios. A total of 811 valid responses were gathered (528 managers, 283 analysts), primarily from individuals investing in North America (41.6%) and Europe (36.4%). The largest proportion of respondents reported managing between $1 billion and $20 billion in assets.
Where litigation risk bites: Descriptive evidence
A large majority of respondents consider climate litigation financially material. Nearly 80% view it as at least moderately important for firm value, and 41% report that its financial relevance has already materialised. Interestingly, investors frequently associate materiality with early-stage events, such as media coverage (23%) or the filing of a case (21%), well before any legal judgment. While carbon-intensive sectors like fossil fuels, utilities, and basic materials are viewed as highly exposed, respondents also perceive significant litigation risk across non-carbon sectors. Furthermore, human rights and greenwashing cases are deemed highly concerning alongside traditional damages claims.
Structured heterogeneity in litigation risk beliefs
Analysis groups respondents into three broad profiles: Unconcerned, Regulatory-focused, and Physical/Litigation-focused. Unconcerned investors assign low importance to climate litigation. Regulatory-focused investors view litigation and regulation as complementary drivers for climate action, anticipating courts to impose emission reduction obligations. Conversely, Physical/Litigation-focused investors perceive litigation and regulation as substitutes, expecting litigation to arise from regulatory failures that lead to high physical damages and subsequent compensation claims.
Investor characteristics and belief heterogeneity
Geographic exposure, institutional scale, and investment mandates explain much of the variation in beliefs. Investors focused on North America attach greater importance to climate-related legal risk, likely due to a prominent historical corporate liability environment. Growth-oriented investors are 71.5% more likely to believe climate litigation is financially material now, indicating they view it as a structural risk affecting long-run corporate strategy. Additionally, larger institutions and respondents with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) mandates display consistently higher concern across various types of legal cases.
Conclusion
Climate litigation is broadly viewed as financially material, yet investors differ systematically in assessing its urgency, expected timing, and transmission channels. The report suggests that because this disagreement is structured rather than idiosyncratic, clearer information and standardisation of disclosure regarding firms’ climate litigation exposures could help reduce uncertainty and meaningfully improve the efficiency of risk pricing in financial markets.