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Ipsos CASH Index Jumps From All-Time CASH Index Low To The Highest Rating In Six Months
Increased Optimism About The Future Of America's Local Economies Witnessed In The Lead Up To The War In Iraq And During War
Partisan Party Identification May Explain Some Of The Record Jump In The CASH Index -
Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: Below 90 For Fifth Straight Month, In Sharp Contrast to Optimism of First Half of Year
CASH Index Fell Below 90 in June and Has Never Recovered;
Was Near or Above 100 Most of the First Five Months of 2002 -
Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: Remains Low, At 74.9, But Change Since QII Suggests Poor Consumer Attitudes May Not Translate Directly Into A Poor Holiday Shopping Season
But In The Longer-Range, Continued Low Scores On Job Prospects May Indicate Consumers Assume A Continued Slow Economy In Early 2003
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Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: At 73.8, Lowest Rating of 2002
Confidence in Local Economic Prospects Drives Worries; In October, Only 29% Say Their Local Economy Will Improve in Next Six Months, While 17% Expect Local Economy to Get Worse
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Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: At 79.2, Three Straight Months in the Doldrums
Lack of Confidence in Local Economic Prospects Drives Worries; Concern about Personal Finances Overtakes Lack of Confidence in Investments as Second Biggest Economic Worry
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Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Congressional Preference Does Not Favor Democrats
Midterm Election Party Preference Is "thisclose" - Here's Why
In September, Bush's Handling of Economy Became Less of a Factor -
Ipsos Reports Consolidated Results For 1st Half Of 2002
Strong Growth In Revenues: +13%
Net Income Up 29%
Improved Operating Profitability -
Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: At 82.2 In September
Steady Low Since July
Concern About The Future Of The Economy Is The Largest Contributor By Far To The Downward Trend
Who Is Most Bearish On The Economy? - East And West Coast, Middle Aged, Less Educated