Our Track Record

We’re the ones who track monthly withholding and sales tax receipts in
the 25 largest states, and are known by traders around the world for
the accurate forecasts of the BLS’s Employment Report (the
“non-farm payroll,” or NFP), and the
Census’s Advance Retail Sales print that we build on the
results of these surveys.Our Withholding Diffusion Index (WDI), the share of states at or above
forecasted collections, has a .74 correlation with the monthly changes
in national employment:

WDI-&-E-yty

and our Sales Diffusion Index (SDI) a .75 correlation with the Advance
Retail Sales print:

SDI-&-retail-yty

This is just the raw data.  Of course we fine tune our
forecasts based on the comments we hear from our tax contacts, and
other economic intelligence we have collected.  The markets
work on shocks to expectations: when our tax contacts are shocked, we
know a successful trader can put that information to good use.

Back in 2001 we were the first to warn of a corporate profit squeeze in
a report that received widespread attention, and throughout 2002 we
argued that hidden weakness in the labor market was bound to show up
soon. And show up it did: against widespread speculation that the 2003
non-farm benchmarks would be positive and huge, we cautioned, based, as
always, on the conversations with our tax contacts and the details in
the data, that there was no evidence for this, in fact the risk was
quite the opposite. The benchmark? Negative. This is the kind of work
that has earned us the reputation of being the best in the business on
national employment trends.

In spring 2006, our report, Edgy Debtors and a History Book,
highlighted research showing that the current housing boom was an
anomaly in US history, and that housing prices have indeed fallen in
real terms, preparing our subscribers for what was to come. More
recently we have raised a number of red flags: a steep decline in truck
sales that was definitely not the result of the then-popular
“environmental regulation” explanation; a sudden
reversal of remittances to Mexico that we believed told the real story
of construction employment; and ample evidence that recent spikes in
federal withholding receipts had little to do with actual employment
levels and were likely to reverse, as they always do, as calendar
factors fall back into balance.

by Philippa Dunne· · Comments are Disabled · Uncategorized