Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) ratings are plagued by methodological fragmentation and persistently low cross-agency correlations, particularly in the social (S) and governance (G) pillars. Although prior studies link employee welfare to equity returns, they offer limited theoretical insight into the mechanisms through which organizational friction affects long-term firm risk and performance. This paper introduces a structural ESG framework grounded in the Life-Value Reflow (LVR) model. We jointly identify a latent state variable—the reflow signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which captures organizational health and value distribution to employees—and its observable accounting proxy, Organizational Friction Momentum (OFM), a measure of slow-moving production inefficiency orthogonal to standard profitability and investment factors. Using a panel of ten mega-cap U.S. firms from 2008 to 2021, we first demonstrate that a decline in SNR—constructed via natural language processing of Glassdoor employee reviews—strongly forecasts higher future 12-month tail risk. This serves as clinical validation of the SNR construct under steady-state conditions. We then scale the test to a broad cross-section of U.S. equities (2021–2025) using Residual OFM. The predictive power of OFM proves highly regime-dependent: in normal market conditions of 2024, it delivers a Fama-French five-factor alpha of 1.23% per month (t = 2.37) and an annualized equal-weighted long-short return of 15.54%. Yet during the 2023 liquidity-concentration regime—marked by extreme flight-to-quality and mega-cap dominance—the premium vanishes entirely, producing a cumulative return of –0.68%. Over the full 33-month stress-test window (2022–2025), the unconditional equal-weighted long-short return is 0.568% per month (6.81% annualized), with a Fama-French alpha of 0.697% (t = 1.62). In contrast to steady-state predictions, OFM is negatively associated with future downside volatility in the stress period, a pattern we attribute to cost stickiness, organizational capital, and survivorship bias. Overall, the framework provides the first structural measure of the S pillar rooted in firm production dynamics. It shows that organizational friction is not a constant-alpha anomaly but a state-dependent signal whose pricing reverses under extreme liquidity concentration. This conditional asset-pricing perspective clarifies how macro-level market structures can temporarily distort micro-level fundamental signals. Consequently, the results reframe sustainable investing during macro-crises: ESG signals do not fail; rather, the market temporarily loses its capacity to price them.
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guoyong chen
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guoyong chen (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1cf375cdc762e9d85837c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19595985
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