2022- 2026 (Expected) PhD Economic History, London School of Economics
ESRC-funded
Supervisor: Prof. Olivier Accominotti (LSE), Prof. Kim Oosterlinck (ULB)
2025 Visiting PhD, International Center for Finance, Yale Univeristy
Host: Prof. William Goetzmann
2020 - 2021 M.Sc Economic History (Research-track, with Distinction), London School of Economics
Supervisor: Prof. Olivier Accominotti
Relevant coursework: Quantitative Economic History I + II
2017 - 2020 B.Sc Economics, University of Mannheim
Supervisor: Prof. Ernst-Ludwig von Thadden
Relevant coursework: Econometrics, Microeconomics
2019 Visiting Undergraduate, National University of Singapore
PROMOS Scholarship
Relevant coursework: Mathematical Finance (MA3269), Financial Economics
Undergraduate-level (Seminar)
History of Money: From Middle Ages to Modernity, LSE, Department of Economic History (Sep. 2023- Dec. 2024)
Financial Markets and the Global Economy (EC204), LSE, Department of Economics (Summer 2023)
Microeconomics A, University of Mannheim, Department of Economics (Feb. 2019 - Jun. 2019)
Graduate-level (Teaching Assistant)
History of Global Finance, LSE, Department of Economic History (Sep. 2022 - Jan. 2024)
2025 (Upcoming)
Economic History Society Annual Conference, Glasgow
Yale Finance Lunch Seminar
2024
Financial History Group, LSE, London
Brussels Finance & History Workshop 200 Year BSE, Euronet, Brussels
Graduate Economic History Seminar, LSE, London
Brussels Art Market Workshop, ULB, Brussels
Financial, Economic, and Business History Summer School, Groningen
Economic History Society Annual Conference, New Castle (Poster presentation)
German (Native)
Portuguese (Native)
English (B2/C1)
French (A2)
Spanish (B1)
Sep. 2022 - Aug. 2023
European Central Bank
Trainee Banking Supervision
As part of the expert group on securitisations, I analyzed complex transactions on compliance with the regulatory framework on risk transfer. I worked on an independent project to create an interactive tool to visualize regulatory data from COREP.
Jan. 2020 - Jun. 2020
Leibnitz Center for European Economic Research
Research Assistant Dr. Karolin Kirschenmann
I worked on an independent research project on the German banking system. I collected and cleaned data using various databases, incl. S&P Global Markets, SNL Financial and BankFocus. The project eventually turned into my bachelor thesis on the effect of negative interest rate policy on the three-pillar German banking system. I find that savings and cooperative banks react similarly, contrasting the actions taken by private banks.
STATA
R
LaTex
Tableau