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Dollar bullish news does little for the US dollar. To our surprise, the
market completely ignored Canada's admission to underreporting US imports in the month of November. If you recall, the US trade deficit widened to a new record in November. Such an error by Canada would mean that deficit was much narrower than expected. In fact the US Commerce Department said that the Canadian error could add as much as 0.5% to US Q4 GDP, which could boost Friday's release to 3.6%. Taking this and the sharp rise in foreign inflow as reported by the TIC data during the month of November in account, we are left with a potentially very positive dollar development. Meanwhile, the other economic data released today was equally positive. Personal income climbed a whopping 3.7% in the month of December, which was the fastest pace of growth on record; the government began keeping records in 1959. A one-time $32.6 billion dividend payment by Microsoft accounted for most of the increase, as income growth net of the dividend is only 0.6%. Generally it is rare for one company's dividend to have such a significant impact on personal incomes, but Microsoft is one of the most widely held stocks in the US and in fact, the payout was more than the federal income tax rebates forked out by Uncle Sam in the summer of 2001. Chicago PMI jumped to 62.4 from an upwardly revised 61.9 in January. The market had actually expected the index to dip, but a rise in new orders, production, employment and a dip in prices paid helped to boost the index. This suggests that tomorrow's ISM survey could also surprise on the upside. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If you guys keep screwing with US economic data, the next time there's another errant friendly-fire incident, it might happen just North of our border...instead of in Afghanistan. |