http://www.cilawgroup.com/news/2013/...tober-23-2013/
EB-1. This category is expected to remain current throughout the fiscal year.
EB-2 Rest of World (ROW). This category is expected to remain current throughout the fiscal year; however, Mr. Oppenheim suggested that depending on demand he may introduce a cutoff date towards the end of the fiscal year.
EB-2 China. This category is expected to continue to move forward by approximately 3-5 weeks per month in each Visa Bulletin.
EB-2 India. This is the major headline from our meeting with Mr. Oppenheim – EB-2 India is expected to retrogress significantly – by several years back to late 2005 or early 2005 as early as the next Visa Bulletin. It is expected that EB-2 India will remain at that level (late 2004 or early 2005) until the summer of 2014. The rationale behind this severe retrogression in EB-2 India is that there is simply too much “demand” (number of pending cases caused by I-485 filings and EB-3 to EB-2 porting cases, plus adding dependents) in this category and the Visa Office has to stop the rate of new filings until USCIS and DOS are able to approve the pending cases and “clear the demand.”
EB-3 Rest of World (ROW). This category is expected to move forward significantly (up to one year) over the next one or two months to stimulate “demand” for the next several months.
EB-3 China/Philippines. Each of these two categories is expected to keep moving forward by 2 weeks per month.
EB-3 India. Unfortunately, this category continues to be oversubscribed and there is no forward movement expected in the next (December 2013) Visa Bulletin. In addition, Mr. Oppenheim indicated that a retrogression is very possible in the near future. This would be caused by the fact that there are simply too many EB-3 India applicants waiting for a visa number to become available. However, as a positive sign, as many EB-3 India applicants are porting into EB-2, there is some possibility that some EB-3 visa numbers may be “freed” simply because some EB-3 candidates will drop out of the EB-3 demand line after receiving a green card under a newly ported EB-2 category.
EB-5. Mr. Oppenheim suggested that the demand for EB-5 is on an upward trajectory and he indicated that the most recent fiscal year noted a 15% increase in EB-5 China cases. This makes it likely that there would be a cutoff date introduced towards the summer for EB-5 China (only).