
Katherine Judge
Katherine Judge is an executive director and senior economist at CIBC Capital Markets, where she analyzes economic trends and provides insights on monetary policy. With a focus on Canadian economic data, Judge has been influential in interpreting inflation metrics and their implications for interest rate decisions by the Bank of Canada. Her recent commentary highlighted the unexpected decline in inflation and its potential to prompt a rate cut, reflecting her expertise in economic forecasting and market analysis.
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CIBC economists Benjamin Tal and Katherine Judge explained the problem succinctly in a recent report.
In Canada’s broken system, houses are too expensive to buy – and too expensive to buildKatherine Judge, senior economist with Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, provided insights on consumer spending and economic growth.
Canada’s economy stalls, posting consecutive quarterly declinesCIBC economist Katherine Judge provides insights on the housing market alongside Benjamin Tal.
Ontario’s tuition increases are eminently manageable. But the financial aid changes will stingKatherine Judge forecasts potential challenges for the Canadian economy in the upcoming quarters.
Canada’s GDP rebounds in third quarter, but trade numbers mask broader weaknessKatherine Judge, senior economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, commented on the impact of tariffs on trade activity.
Canada’s trade deficit widens to second-highest level as exports dropKatherine Judge, senior economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, commented on the impact of tariffs on trade.
Canada’s trade deficit widens to second-highest level as exports dropKatherine Judge is an economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce who provided insights on the Bank of Canada's monetary policy.
Bank of Canada holds key rate, leaves door open to future cuts amid tariff uncertaintyKatherine Judge is the executive director and senior economist at CIBC Capital Markets.
Surprisingly soft inflation data jolts markets into pricing 50/50 odds of rate cut Wednesday



















