From Zero Hedge:
The headlines are blaring of a massive surge in January employment that blew away analysts' expectations. Frankly, I find it hard to believe that any analysts would not have expected this "news." The real time Federal Withholding Tax daily data for January, which I dutifully cover each week in the Treasury updates, showed a massive surge beginning in late December. Since everybody didn't get a 10% raise, the analysts might have inferred that more people were working. Whether that's a sustainable trend or not is another question, but for January at least, there should have been no mystery.
I like to look behind the headlines at the real unadjusted, unmassaged, unmanipulated numbers to get some idea of what's really going on. Here's where things get strange.
Total reported employment and full time employment plunged in January, as is normal for that month. So the Gummit survey data doesn't square with the tax collections. Had we based our forecast for the headlines (which is the only thing that matters to the market in the short run) on the withholding data, we would have gotten it right, but for the wrong reasons. It's a head scratcher that suggests that the Gummit's employment numbers shouldn't be trusted, which isn't news. What we do know for sure is that there was a gigantic surge in withholding taxes from late December to mid-January, and that surge disappeared completely in the last week...
Read full article...
More on jobs:
This morning's "fantastic" jobs report is hiding some shocking news
These facts show the U.S. gov't is actively making unemployment worse
Mind-blowing chart shows the government could be responsible for high unemployment