Kunzite

29-9-2012

How might a stock market technical analyst see the U.S. employment situation?

For us, that’s a fun question because while we don’t put much stock in technical analysis, we do consider it to be a very weak form of statistical analysis, so it’s not as completely useless as astrology in divining data.

In practice, there’s really not much more to technical analysis other than arbitrarily connecting the dots between the peaks and troughs of data points within a trend, combined with trying to divine patterns from the data, like the infamous “head and shoulders” pattern or the equally fun “dead cat bounce”.

So to make it interesting, we’ve opted to apply it to the month-over-month change in the number of employed Americans counted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in each month since the total employment level in the United States peaked in November 2007, just one month before the economy peaked before heading into recession, and specifically, we’ll use it to try to answer the question: “how much of the jobs recovery can be attributed to policies implemented during President Bush’s administration, and how much can be attributed to policies implemented during President Obama’s reign in office?”

Here’s what we find:

via Political Calculations: Applying Technical Analysis to Employment Data.


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