posted on 2025-11-24, 02:56authored byDT Nguyen, VT Tran, A Le, Dinh PhanDinh Phan
This study examines how climate change exposure influences firms' use of trade credit using 57,837 observations from 2001 to 2023 of U.S firms. Firms with higher climate risk obtain significantly higher trade credit, with the effect intensifying after the Paris Agreement and high environmental litigation risk. The association is stronger among financially constrained firms and varies by risk type: physical and opportunity-related risks increase trade credit, while regulatory risk dampens it. Trade credit is also higher among firms with more positive climate sentiment, indicating that suppliers respond favourably to optimistic transition narratives. Firms with greater climate risk issue more equity and face higher debt costs—consistent with demand-side deleveraging and supply-side credit tightening—underscoring trade credit's role as an alternative liquidity source when traditional debt becomes less accessible. This study also provides policy implications based on the findings.<p></p>
Funding
This research is funded by the Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training under grant No B2025-DNA-09.