About us
We are an outcomes based forecasting service leveraging technology with expertise. We forecast major negotiations across a range of potential political and economic issues. From this information, we can advise what is to be done for better outcomes.
The service we offer has received significant positive press, including from CNBC, Politico, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, offering accurate and outperforming predictions from significant industry shaping M&A deals to major international negotiations. The service is over 90% accurate per a declassified CIA report. The Agency has reportedly used the service thousands of times on many different issues around the world.
Jonathan Grady
Canary is led by Founding Principal, Jonathan Grady, a leading strategist with a proven record advising business and politics across borders.
Jonathan holds an MBA in finance and banking from NYU Stern, where he received multiple accolades, including winning a national MBA case competition. He also holds a Master in International Affairs from the School of Global Policy and Strategy, one of the top China and international affairs departments in the United States, and was awarded a Dean's Merit Scholarship.
Jonathan has earned recognition in leading media around the world for his work and insights. Notably, Jonathan was the architect of the largest game theory project for a public audience by a major media organization. Jonathan led a CNBC forecast project on China related economic and security issues that covered around 300 unique stakeholders across 15 countries in the larger Asia-Pacific region.
The project was later featured in a CNBC International TV documentary and lauded for contributions to data journalism, receiving significant positive reaction and praise from first rate investors to world leading experts for its insights and outperforming predictions.
Jonathan implements under special license the game theory forecast model developed by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, a Stanford and New York University professor. The New York Times described Bruce as one of the world's most prominent game theorists.