“…The empirical findings of Hassan et al (2019) suggest that an increase in firm‐level political risk spurs volatility in firms' stock returns and suppresses investments, capital budgets and hiring. Among studies that use Hassan et al's proxy of political risk Choi et al (2021) corroborate the finding that firm‐level political risk depresses investments; Gad et al (2021) find lenders adjust interest rates in response to changes in borrowers' political risk; Das and Yaghoubi (2023) show firm‐level political risk reduces stock liquidity; Islam et al (2022) show distance to default decreasing in firm‐level political risk; and Ho et al (2022, p. 1) show “ political risk premium of about 0.30% per month in the equity option market .” While evidence on the firm‐level political risk is largely limited to handful of studies, a significant strand of literature examines the firm‐level outcomes of aggregate political risk or policy uncertainty. For example, political and regulatory uncertainty depresses mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity within firm and in the economy (Bonaime et al, 2018); economic policy uncertainty exerts a positive impact on future market returns (Brogaard & Detzel, 2015); political risk positively affects industry return volatility (Boutchkova et al, 2011); firms reduce investments in response to policy uncertainty during election years (Julio & Yook, 2012); during gubernatorial election years, firms headquartered in those states reduce IPO activity (Colak et al, 2016); and policy uncertainty lowers M&As and takes longer time to complete M&A transactions, discouraging corporate investments (Nguyen & Phan, 2017).…”