Author: Sherry Cooper
January 24, 2013
Category: Uncategorized
BMO chief economist Sherry Cooper on retirement (and the bad boys of Bay Street)
A star was born 30 years ago, when a petite young U.S. economist moved to Toronto to join brokerage firm Burns Fry. Smart, stylish and tough, Sherry Cooper became the belle of Bay Street. Burns Fry was acquired by Bank of Montreal in 1994, and Cooper rose to become the bank’s chief economist in 2006….
December 10, 2012
Category: About Sherry Media
Bank of Montreal Chief Economist Sherry Cooper to Retire
Bank of Montreal, the country’s fourth-largest bank by assets, said chief economist Sherry Cooper will retire from the bank in January after a 30-year career. Cooper, 62, a member of the 12-economist Economic Advisory Committee of the American Bankers Association, will retire Jan. 30, the Toronto-based bank said today in a statement. A replacement will…
Bank of Montreal chief economist Sherry Cooper is retiring after a 30-year career at BMO Financial Group. Cooper, an executive vice-president, plans to step down effective Jan. 30, the bank announced Monday. “Sherry has built a reputation throughout North America for her straightforward, engaging style,” president and CEO Bill Downe said. “She brings clarity to…
TORONTO, ON, December 10, 2012 – After a distinguished 30-year career at BMO Financial Group, Dr. Sherry Cooper, Executive Vice-President and Chief Economist, has decided to retire from the Bank, effective January 30, 2013. An award-winning economist and best-selling author, Dr. Cooper has led BMO’s respected team of economists since 2006. “Sherry has built a…
The first thing Sherry Cooper plans to do after she leaves her job is take a month off “and get my head around not having to come to First Canadian Place every day and then, you know, I’ll be open to different things, different opportunities.” After 30 years at Bank of Montreal, Ms. Cooper, 62,…
Sherry Cooper’s latest article on U.S. fiscal policy is available as an Adobe Acrobat document through this link from BMO Capital Markets Economics.
With much of the focus in Washington on the fiscal cliff, which is now only one month away, a potentially more important cliffhanger is the debt-ceiling debate—likely to come to its precipice in February 2013.
Sherry Cooper’s latest article on the U.S. fiscal cliff is available as an Adobe Acrobat document through this link from BMO Capital Markets Economics.
We have reduced our Canadian growth estimate to a mere 1% in the third quarter owing to a contraction in residential construction and business investment in machinery and equipment.
October 12, 2012
Category: Articles
Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity – Get Used To It
VUCA is an acronym used to describe the volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity of the world today. Its usage began in the late 1990s and comes from the American military lexicon to describe the extreme conditions in Afghanistan and Iraq.