SUMMARY
1. We believe the dates should actually move past Q1-2008 in 2012 itself although they are U / unavailable right now for EB2IC.
Reason - The reason behind this optimism is two-fold.
1. The much less than normal EB1 and EB2ROW demand. (This is based on the 485 data published. I was wrong to look at trackitt trend. That data is not useful for predicting EB1 EB2ROW demand in 2012)
2. Q1+Q2 didnt seem to have allocated more visas than normal. This is actually based on trackitt trend and how much 2007 and 2008 is approved vs outstanding.
Bottomline - Although VO has communicated that dates will be U for EB2IC. We believe they will move within 2012 itself and move significantly upto Mid 2008.
Those interested in detailed analysis, graphs and simulation, check out http://whereismygc.com. Disclosure - that is a commercial website.
FACTS AND DATA SECTION
Those wanting to do their own analysis, you can find a treasure of data in FACTS and DATA section. http://www.qesehmk.org/forums/forumd...FACTS-AND-DATA
Acronyms
SOFAD - Spillover Fall Across and Down
SO - Spillover
FA - Fall Across
FD - Fall Down
CD - Cutoff Date
PD - Priority Date
PD<CD (Priority Date within Cut Off Date)
CP - Consular Processing
PWMB - People w PD prior to July 07 who missed boat (i.e. 2007 July 485 Boat).
PWBA - People Waiting for Boat to arrive (i.e. waiting to file 485)
SYA - Same year approvals
R485 - ROW 485 filings in EB2
SFM - Sustainable Forward Movement
BTM - Big Temporary Movement
UFM - Unsustainable Forward Movement
TBM - Temporary Backward Movement
CO - Charles Oppenheim
VO - Visa Office
VB - Visa Bulletin
NVC - National Visa Center
NSC - Nebrasca Service Center
TSC - Texas Service Center
Visa Dates Movement & Retrogression
The visa movement was quite unexpected but the retrogression wasn't. We always maintained that after July 2007 there was a cliff in terms of demand and USCIS needed to build inventory again. How much they built was a matter of policy and they chose to build 3 years of inventory 2007-2010. So our advice is - all the talk about not enough approval cases and low or high EB1 or EB2 ROW demand is all irrelevant at best and misguidance at worst. Just focus on this fact that USCIS needed to build inventory and the way they moved dates was to take a slow orderly intake.
So the movement was UFM so far. Now there will be a severe (more than necessary) retrogression followed by SFM.
May 2007 or prior is what I consider severe. So even that is not sustainable. However two things do NOT bode well for EB2IC
a) EB1 approvals - YTD EB1 has consumed 4 times visas compared to prior year according to trackitt. But that is clouded by the EB1I data and hence more reliable data point is latest 485 inventory which clearly shows EB1 demand at about 2K max per month.
b) EB2IC YTD approvals - It seems EB2IC has already consumed minimum of 17K and probably upto 24K of visas. However given the weaker eB2ROW and EB1 demand, it means they received that much SOFAD because and not inspite of EB1 EB2ROW demand. In other words - This only means that there is Q3/Q4 SOFAD still left for EB2IC.
c) EB2ROW - This too has shows signficant slow down. Again check 485 inventory to see this.
Thus I do not agree with CO or DoS that there won't be any more visas during remainde of the year. Neither I see why ROW should retrogress at all.
I-140 Statistics and SOFAD
Here is interesting I-140 statistics:
I-140 numbers are very interesting since they show secular trend unlike 485 which fluctuates based on vias bulletin dates movement.
2011 I-140 filings ~82000.
2012 I-140 filings ~32K for Q1+Q2 which implies 64K for full year.
That's 20-22% reduction compared to prior year. In terms of extra SOFAD that means approx. 18K extra visas to EB2IC (assuming A) a conservative split of 50-50 between EB1+EB2ROW and rest, and B) 2 visas per I-140.0.
Even if you assume EB2IC has already received 32K visas so far. That still means 18K more are yet to come. We will see... Good luck!
Latest Visa Bulletin Analysis
First CO stayed true to his words and retrogressed.
However some of the language in the VB is a bit too far:
1) Saying that ROW might need retrogression is being too pessimistic (some calculations below)
2) Saying that he will try to reach 2010 for EB2IC in 2013 is too optimistic if he is thinking of clearing EB2IC backlog without HR3012.
So here is the situation as of now.
FACT 1 - 50% of newly filed (i.e. post Aug 2007) 2007 cases are approved.
FACT 2 - 30% of 2008 cases are approved.
FACT 3 - 0% of 2009 and older cases are approved.
FACT 4 - 20% of EB1 cases from 2009-2011 are unapproved.
Worst Case Situation Analysis for EB2ROW - This indicates at approx 2K per month - 12-14K EB2IC cases approved as of now. => 2-3K EB2C approved. So 17K SOFAD so far.
in order for EB2IC to NOT have any more - means EB1 and EB2ROW MUST consume all remaining visas. EB2ROW last year already probably ran at full capacity. EB1 this year is running 3-4 times higher rates compared to prior year. This together doesnt work well for EB2IC.
EB2ROW consumption can't pace at a faster rate than EB2IC. So even if we assume there is no demand destruction for EB2IC, EB2ROW should come in at full year number of 26-34K MAX. Which means that there shouldn't be EB2ROW retrogression (at least for more than a couple of months).
So it is unnecessary pessimism to talk about EB2ROW retrogression.
Trackitt Trend
Here is what the trackitt data shows. Don't focus on the extrapolations - since they are quite out of whack.
I have put it together only to show the fallacy of using trackitt trend. Given the YoY variances - I would suggest using trackitt data in a relative manner i.e. % approved in a year and then extrapolating that to an absolute number. But I would caution that using the data put together here is meaningless yet - I did it only to show the pitfall of using it rather than actually using it for predictions.