
Upcoming events (Thionville)
We will soon be sharing information about our forthcoming Open Days on the Thionville campus.
Assistant Professor in Finance
Contact
Email: mayssa.mhadhbi@ipag.fr
Campus: Paris
Education
Mayssa Mhadhbi is an Assistant Professor in Finance at IPAG Business School. She holds two doctoral degrees, one in Economics from Paris-Saclay University and another in Finance from ESCT Business School in Tunisia, obtained through a cotutelle arrangement. She also qualified as an Associate Professor in Economics through a national competitive examination. Her research focuses on financial markets, environmental economics, and energy transitions, with several publications addressing the dynamics of energy markets, carbon markets, and environmental quality. Before joining IPAG, she was an Assistant Professor at Paris-Saclay University.
Goutte, S., & Mhadhbi, M. (2021). On the asymmetric relationship between stock market development, energy efficiency, and environmental quality: A nonlinear analysis. International Review of Financial Analysis, 77.
Mhadhbi, M., & Stephane, G. (2024). Analysing crisis dynamics: How metal-energy markets influence green electricity investments. Energy Economics, 107614.
Mhadhbi, M. (2024). The interconnected carbon, fossil fuels, and clean energy markets: Exploring Europe and China’s perspectives on climate change. Finance Research Letters, 105185.
Shahrour, M. H., Mhadhbi, M., & Arouri, M. (submitted). Dynamic connectedness and hedging effectiveness between green bonds, ESG indices, and traditional assets.
Mhadhbi, M., Stephane, G., & Talel, B. (submitted). Asymmetric effects of decomposed oil-price shocks on carbon markets.
Chen, H., Tang, R., & Mhadhbi, M. (submitted). Exploring the impact of the eco-city concept on the sustainability of the real estate market: The case of Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City, China.
Youssef, I., Mhadhbi, M., & Ali, S. (working paper). Return and volatility spillover between G7 equity markets and IoT tokens.
Mhadhbi, M., Talel, B., & Christan, U. (working paper). Asymmetric connectedness among stocks, energy, and carbon emissions trading systems in Europe and China.
Research Areas
Teaching Areas
Application
Contact