The good news for his daughters came as Obama acknowledged his family's contributions to his campaign. The news prompted even bigger smiles as they surrounded him. He did not go into details about a name or breed for the new White House pet, who will follow in the steps of the Bush family's Scottish terriers, Barney and Miss Beazley.
His remarks were seen as a recognition of the huge electoral asset his family have been during the campaign to get him elected.
Mr Obama's wife, 44-year-old Michelle, is believed by many to have been crucial in clinching his victory.
When he had to break off the campaign just days before the election to visit his dying grandmother, Mrs Obama stepped in for him at events he had to miss.
The couple were married 16 years ago after they met at a law firm in Chicago. She has described her husband as the "love of my life".
Mrs Obama, a graduate of Princeton and Harvard Law School, was brought up in a poor neighbourhood on the south side of Chicago.
Beyond the US, the election result has also been a cause for pride and rejoicing in Kenya.
Mr Obama's late father was Kenyan, and his 86-year-old step-grandmother, "Mama Sarah", still lives in Kogelo, a tiny village near the border with Uganda. Reported by PA
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