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Abul M. M. Masih

Researcher at King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

Publications -  47
Citations -  4049

Abul M. M. Masih is an academic researcher from King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cointegration & Granger causality. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 46 publications receiving 3909 citations. Previous affiliations of Abul M. M. Masih include University of New South Wales & Griffith University.

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Energy consumption, real income and temporal causality: results from a multi-country study based on cointegration and error-correction modelling techniques

TL;DR: In this article, the authors test for cointegration between total energy consumption and real income of six Asian economies: India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines.
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On the temporal causal relationship between energy consumption, real income, and prices: Some new evidence from Asian-energy dependent NICs Based on a multivariate cointegration/vector error-correction approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors test for cointegration between total energy consumption, real income, and price level of two highly energy dependent East-Asian NICs: Korea and Taiwan.
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Are Asian stock market fluctuations due mainly to intra-regional contagion effects? Evidence based on Asian emerging stock markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the long and short-term dynamic linkages among international and Asian emerging stock markets and then tried to quantify the extent of the Asian stock market fluctuations which are explained by intra-regional contagion effect.

Long and short term dynamic causal transmission amongst international stock markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the dynamic causal linkages among nine major international stock price indexes and found significant interdependencies between the established OECD and the Asian markets, and also the leadership of the US and UK markets over the short and long run.
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Long and short term dynamic causal transmission amongst international stock markets

TL;DR: In this article, Toda et al. investigated the dynamic causal linkages among nine major international stock price indexes and found significant interdependencies between the established OECD and Asian markets, and also the leadership of the US and UK markets over the short and long run.