Decoding RaymondsIndex: The Momentum Alignment Index (MAI), Explained
Every quarter, a company tells you two stories about itself. One is the income statement — revenue, operating profit, earnings per share. The other is the cash flow statement — how much money actually moved. Most of the time the two stories rhyme. The Momentum Alignment Index (MAI) exists for the moments when they stop rhyming. What MAI measures. MAI is one of the four RaymondsIndex leading signals, and it is deliberately narrow. It tracks the alignment between two rates of change: revenue-growth momentum and capital-expenditure-growth momentum. In a healthy business, the two tend to move in the same direction over a multi-quarter window — you invest, and with a lag, revenue follows; or revenue slows, and prudent management slows investment. When those two curves diverge and stay diverged, MAI reads a mismatch. Sustained mismatch is one of the classic conditions under which reported earnings and economic reality quietly separate — the technical definition of an earnings-quality probl...