Posts Tagged ‘economists’
Enjoy the historic low Austin mortgage rates
“Regulators, mount up”! Not exactly what Warren G. had in mind when he recorded the song but fitting just the same. Next time we see a regulator entering our building, his or her card will read, “ Joe Regulator, we regulate any stealing of his property and we darn good too, but you can’t be a geek off the street, gotta be handy with the steel if you know what I mean, earn your keep”! Just had to have a little fun with the passing of FinReg. As my first boss always told me, “ Change is always for the better but sometimes it takes time to see it.”
Stocks are getting pounded, down 200 on the Dow, the 10 year note is up 12/32’s, and mortgage backs are plus 4 to 6/32’s depending on the coupon. Why you ask. First up, CPI, inflation at the consumer level fell .1% while the “core index” (ex-food and energy”, rose .1%. Tame by any means with a whiff of deflation in the cards (slim chance in our opinion). Michigan Sentiment Survey was the one that raised an eyebrow, falling nearly 10 points to 66.5. Economists noted that consumers have gone into a cocoon, chaining their wallets to themselves only to be opened for necessitates. Expect Retail Sales to soften in the future.
BP finally put a cork in their crude oil jug, a welcome site indeed. Technically, the late rally (yesterday) provided the perfect set up for a continuation pattern (further rally). Stocks are really the major influence here. We see this a just a move to the top of the range (2.90% 10 year note). Any where here, current mortgage pricing or a little better is a good place for borrowers to lock in their Austin mortgage interest rates. Any reversal in stocks will simple reverse our direction and take the market to the lower part of the range. Enjoy the historic low Austin mortgage rates.
Earlier today, the February Trade Deficit grew to 39.7 billion
Earlier today, the February Trade Deficit grew to 39.7 billion. Economists were looking for the number to come in closer to 38.5 billion. The jump was concentrated in the goods deficit rising 1.9 billion. March Import Prices were also released, up .7%. 80% of the rise can be traced to a 2.9% increase in fuel prices. Been to the pump lately? Fixed income prices were strong in early trading as “forced buying” in both the 5 year and 10 year notes took place as the top of the range was breached.
After going negative, the market has started to boot strap itself back up. From the technical side, trading above the range highs is encouraging but is viewed as “cautiously optimistic”. With Ben Bernanke due on the hill tomorrow and most of the low volume trade directed by fast money types and day traders, the market may need time to prove itself. Stocks are up a hand full, mortgage backs up 2/32’s, and the 10 year note is trading at 3.81%, all positive elements. At least for today. We’ll call the market neutral/bullish yet still feeling the need to keep both hands on the wheel.
That scenario has a high probability (in our opinion) and brings with it lower Austin mortgage rates
Meant to post this Austin Mortgage Blog entry yesterday:
The week has gotten off to a slow start with the 10 year note off slightly and mortgage backs following suit. The stability can be linked to month/quarter end adjustments by money managers and hedge funds to bring their bogey in line with the Barclays Index. That buying should continue through tomorrow as the index needs are .16 years (duration add). Earlier today, Personal Income/Spending hit the tape unchanged and up .3%. Economists were looking for Income to be up .1% and Spending to be up .3%. No great shakes here.
The balance of the week could get a little dicey however with Housing and Consumer Confidence tomorrow, ADP Employment “guess” on Wednesday, Construction Spending, ISM Index, and Weekly Claims on Thursday, and Big Daddy, the Employment Report for March front and center on Friday (7:30 am cst).
For now, the tactical bias is neutral/defensive into what the market feels is going to be a positive jobs number (plus 200K). The weakness of the past few trading days has changed the trend to bearish. The little bit of stability we’re seeing is only due to month end. That can only mean one thing as seller are waiting in the wings. We would advise borrowers to lock their Austin mortgage interest rates, expecting that we will see 4.0% on the 10 year note before we see 3.75%. The interest rate landscape (lower Austin mortgage rates) is not over, just on hold.
Given the Fed’s exit from MBS purchases, their steering of quantitative easing ala Austin mortgage rates hike sooner than later, and a fragile housing market that must be content will mean more inventory and less stimulus, a case for the double dip can certainly be made. That scenario has a high probability (in our opinion) and brings with it lower Austin mortgage rates.
Hang in there.
Quiet Week for Austin Mortgage Markets
During a very light week for economic news, the economic data and Treasury auctions contained few surprises and produced little reaction in mortgage markets. Mortgage rates ended the week nearly unchanged.
In early 2009, the Fed embarked on a $1.25 trillion mortgage-backed securities (MBS) purchase program to help keep mortgage rates low and stimulate the economy. The amount purchased varied from week to week, reaching a peak of $33.2 billion in the week of March 25, 2009. The Fed has been gradually reducing the size of its purchases at a pace consistent with a March 31 conclusion of the program, and the most recent weekly purchases have been down to around $10 billion.
As the date nears, the big question is what will happen when the MBS purchase program ends. This program is unprecedented, making the outcome difficult to predict, and forecasts vary widely. Estimates for the impact on mortgage rates from the conclusion of the program vary from an increase of one percent to no change. Those who predict higher mortgage rates point to a basic change in the fundamental supply and demand. The added demand from the Fed was widely credited with moving rates lower, and a decrease in demand would typically push rates higher. However, other economists argue that investors respond only to unexpected news. In this view, since the Fed has telegraphed the end of the program for months, there should be little reaction around March 31. The Fed itself has indicated that they expect a modest increase in Austin mortgage rates due to the end of the program.
Week Ahead
The big story next week will be Tuesday’s Fed meeting. No change in the fed funds rate is expected, but any surprises in the Fed’s statement could produce a large reaction. The most significant economic data next week will be the monthly inflation reports. The Producer Price Index (PPI) focuses on the increase in prices of “intermediate” goods used by companies to produce finished products and will come out on Wednesday. The Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most closely watched monthly inflation report, will come out on Thursday. CPI looks at the price change for those finished goods which are sold to consumers. In addition, Industrial Production, an important indicator of economic activity, will be released on Monday. Housing Starts are scheduled for Tuesday. Import Prices, Leading Indicators, and Philly Fed will round out a busy week.
Using one standard deviation and a dart board, our bias is for 100k in job losses and a 9.9% unemployment rate
Let’s see what we have to deal with today; Sovereign debt problems in Greece continue to hold Euro zone hostage, massive short in our mortgage backed securities paper has traders scrambling, economic news such as Productivity, Factory Orders, Unemployment Claims, and Pending Home Sales, Treasury auction supply coming next week, and tomorrow’s weather skewed Employment Report due out at 7:30 am cst. Just another day at the salt mine.
Weekly Unemployment Claims fell 27K to 469K as seasonal factors and the weather related snafu has everyone guessing is this real or Memorex. The big picture points to the percentage of eligible people receiving unemployment benefits being 3.5%, well above the reading that creates jobs. Seems to us that unemployment is stabilizing albeit at higher levels. Not the makings of a vibrant economy.
Pending Home Sales looked like a Rottweiler as well, falling 7.6% in January. Economists were looking for a plus 1.0% print. Once again, the NAR Chief Lawrence Yun blames the weather for affecting home shopping. Maybe we’ll get a clear read in July. For the record, all regions were in the red with the West falling 13.2%. Did it snow in California?
Factory Orders were up 1.7% with the ex-transportation up .1%. A 15% gain in transportation orders did this trick for this number. Maybe new accelerator parts for Toyota. Productivity gains were off the chart, rising 6.9%. The flip side was a drop in labor costs of 5.9%. We are putting computers to work, not Joe the Plumber. All of the above has flattened the yield curve with the 10 year note up 4/32’s and the bond plus 13/32’s.
One positive here is that until we work through this massive off sides market position in MBS, mortgage pricing will be supported, helping to keep pricing stable. I’m going to give you our best guess on tomorrow’s jobs data.
Expectations for the February Employment Report are as follows;
1) Non-Farm Payrolls – Minus 50K
2) Unemployment – Rate 9.8%
3) Hourly Earning – Plus .2 month on month
4) Average Work Week – Minus .2
As we have been talking about, the weather is going to make a mess of the numbers. We expect continued job losses in manufacturing, construction, and private services payrolls. Construction should be hit the hardest, probably losing another 50K. Consensus workers are a wild card as the government is expected to ramp up hiring, adding 1.2 million short term workers over time.
Using one standard deviation and a dart board, our bias is for 100k in job losses and a 9.9% unemployment rate. JPMorgan has the call at minus 90K and 9.9%, Barclays at Minus 75K and 9.8%, Wells Fargo at minus 80k and 9.7%, and Credit Suisse the outlier at minus 125K and 9.9%. If there is a miss, it will be towards more job losses than less. You may recall that I wrote about John Ryding call that job losses would be minus 250K. Don’t know if he is right but I do know he’s a pretty sharp dude. What will the market do? Most likely blow the numbers off due to distortions in the weather but trade nonetheless in a volatile fashion. Once the dust settles, we would expect that pricing will be close to today’s levels “unless” the number is below expectations.
Let’s say we see a -25K or unchanged print. We feel the market would interpret that to be much better than expected once you factor in the weather distortion. Really, this one is a crap shoot. Technically, we’re not getting much help as the 10 year note chart has formed a triangle pattern on the daily time frame. We would need to close below 3.45% to turn this into a raging bull (currently 3.61%) so not much help there. Triangle patterns typically wind themselves up, tighter and tighter before a break out occurs. Given the distance in basis points for a bullish outcome, we would side with a break out to higher yields/ worsening mortgage pricing to coincide with the ending of the short squeeze in the MBS market. To put this in English and cut to the chase, be careful out in the days ahead.
The week ahead will be loaded with first tier data including everything from Construction Spending, Housing numbers, and the Employment Report for January
The lack of month end buying and rebounding stocks has pinched treasury and mortgage pricing this morning. 10 year notes are off 12/32’s (yield 3.65%), mortgage backs off 6/32’s, and stocks are up 85 on the big board. The week ahead will be loaded with first tier data including everything from Construction Spending, Housing numbers, and the Employment Report for January.
Earlier today, Personal Income/Spending hit the tape plus .4% and plus .2%, slightly better than economists had predicted yet not anything to write home about. Construction Spending was another story, falling 1.2% versus the minus .5% many were looking for. Cold weather and competition from a heavy inventory of distressed/foreclosure sales has done the trick once again.
The ISM Index (Manufacturing) surprised to the upside, putting it its best number since August 2004 (plus 3.5 points to 58.4). Digging deeper into the numbers, most of the gains came from new orders as inventories need to be rebuilt. The question now becomes, will buyers step up to take the newly produced goods off the shelf? Time will tell.
President Obama’s projected budget sets a new record deficit (1.516 trillion in 2010) as the new budget looks to be 3.8 trillion. Bailout costs for FNMA and FHLMC alone will be 153 billion. Wow.
Technically, note, bond, and MBS structure are in neutral as follow through to the upside (rally) is not in the cards. Bulls need the 8 day moving average (currently we’re sitting on it) at 3.65% to hold. We expect that area to hang in there into tomorrow. Traders will then make a move, one way or the other, on Wednesday and Thursday to hedge positions up for Friday’s Employment Report. Tough one to handicap as predictions on Nonfarm Payrolls and the Unemployment Rate are all over the map. Cautiously optimistic is the best we can come up with.
Bonds, notes, and mortgage backed securities are doing quite well given the plus 100 point gain on the big board
Just released, the NAHB HMI Index fell 1 point to 15. The index is a measure of Home Builder confidence based on a combined survey from the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo’s Housing Market Index. Economists were looking for a bump to 17 but due to a handful of forces, namely consumer concerns about job security and competitive forces from the foreclosed housing market, gains were not to be had. Earlier today, the Treasury Department’s report on International investment (TIC report) showed solid foreign buying of 19.3 billion. This is encouraging as the total purchases, which includes government buying were at the best level since October 2007. The only lager in this sector was net purchases of corporate bonds which may be a signal that corporate America has squeezed as much margin out of cost cutting, etc. that it can, leading to a better appetite for Uncle’s paper given the bumpy economy. Time will tell.
Bonds, notes, and mortgage backed securities are doing quite well given the plus 100 point gain on the big board. 10 year notes off 7/32’s (yield 3.70%) and MBS off 3/32’s tell the tale of the tape. Technically, a series of higher highs and higher lows are developing on the chart. This is typical of bullish price action and will help to limit the downside (selling). Bulls need a close below 3.68% to prove that further upside (rally) is in the cards. Given the limited data until PPI (inflation index) on Wednesday and Weekly Claims/Leading Economic Indicators on Thursday, odds are good that we will continue to hang around current levels.
Jobs Data Falls Short – Austin Mortgage Rates Moved Lower After the News
Over the last few weeks, many economists have been raising their forecasts for economic growth in 2010. The economic data released this week generally did not support this outlook, however, producing some daily volatility. As a result of the weaker than expected data, mortgage rates ended the week a little lower.
In December, the economy lost -85K jobs, which was lower than the consensus forecast of -5K, and the Unemployment Rate remained at 10.0%. A small revision to the November data created a gain of 4K jobs, the first monthly increase since December 2007. The report indicated that 661K people dropped out of the labor force in December. The details suggest that small businesses may be creating jobs more slowly than larger companies. The manufacturing and constructions sectors continued to perform poorly. Average hourly earnings, an indicator of wage growth, showed a small increase. Overall, the data was weaker than expected, and mortgage rates moved lower after the news.
In the housing sector, November Pending Home Sales fell 16% from October, but the decline followed nine straight months of increases and November Pending Home Sales were 15% higher than one year ago. Pending home sales are a leading indicator of future housing market activity. Recent data has been heavily influenced by the timing of the homebuyer tax credit, which was originally set to expire at the end of November. A surge of buyers attempting to purchase before the original deadline pulled demand forward. When the homebuyer tax credit was expanded and extended through the first half of 2010, the time pressure was removed. According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), we should see another “notable” gain in sales activity in coming months.
Week Ahead
The Economic Calendar will be packed on Thursday and Friday next week. Earlier in the week, the Trade Balance will come out on Tuesday, and the Fed’s Beige Book will be released on Wednesday. Retail Sales, which account for about 70% of economic activity, will come out on Thursday, along with Import Prices and Jobless Claims. The Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most closely watched monthly inflation report, will come out on Friday. CPI looks at the price change for those finished goods which are sold to consumers. In addition, Industrial Production, Consumer Sentiment, and the Empire State index will be released on Friday. There will be Treasury auctions on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday.
33% of the sales were distressed units and 51% of the borrowers were first time home buyers. Just think where we’d be without the 8K program
Looks like both Grandma and the market got run over by a reindeer! GDP 3rd Quarter (final revision) slipped to 2.2%, revised lower from the previous posting of 2.8%. Downward revisions to nonresidential fixed investment, private inventory investment, and personal spending did the trick. Economists were looking for a print of plus 2.8%. Although the number was a disappointment, it is certainly better than the negative GDP growth we were seeing earlier in the year. The unemployment picture however, will not heal with growth below 3.0%. Existing Home Sales were also on tap, up 7.4% to 6.54 million units annualized. 33% of the sales were distressed units and 51% of the borrowers were first time home buyers. Just think where we’d be without the 8K program.
Stocks are riding a Santa Claus rally, up another 50 something on the Dow and setting new 2009 highs on the Naz. Bonds, notes, and mortgage backs have continued down their bearish path, starting in Australia and continuing through Asia and Europe. State side traders picked up the ball and battered the market, driving mortgage backs down 20/32’s at the time we priced. We have begun to stabilize but are just off the lows (yield 3.74%) as we speak. Low volume trade or not, the chart shows a stunning break since last Thursday with no signs of letting up. 3.75% on the 10 year note is minor support and psychologically important but nothing to hang your hat on. Bigger picture charts (weekly/monthly) warn of the next level of real support not coming in until we see 3.88% to 3.90%. Market profile and trend intensity also tell us that the bears are in control. Markets like this are dangerous, hoof prints on your back can be painful.
Stocks will hold the key as to where Austin mortgage rates go next
Advanced 3rd Quarter GDP hit the tape better than expected at plus 3.5%. Economists were looking for a 3.3% print while Goldman Sachs revised their number (yesterday) to plus 2.7%. The better than expected number was driven by durable goods (plus 3.4%) and personal consumption (plus 2.36%). In reality, this number caught at least ½ of its gain from Cash for Clunkers and inventory rebuilding. Although important, they are in the rear view mirror, making the road ahead still full of hairpin turns.
Weekly Claims dropped 1K to 530K and Continuing Claims fell a staggering 148K to 5.797 million. The number to focus on here is the Weekly Claims, still maintaining a 500K plus per week average layoff run rate. This is 500,000 people per week losing their jobs. Not the makings of a healthy consumer. Wouldn’t it nice if the White House would move this to the front burner. Instead we have the Treasury Secretary testifying on Capitol Hill, endorsing Barney Frank’s bill for “a strong framework for achieving a safer, more stable financial system.” Trouble is they want to give the Treasury Secretary the power to approve or not to approve the Fed’s decisions on systemic risk. Sounds a little too political for me.
All of the above has put a little volatility back into the market. Currently, the 10 year note is down 20/32’s (yield 3.49%), MBS down 6/32’s, and stocks up 75 points on the big board. Stocks will hold the key as to where Austin mortgage rates go next. The current pattern (stocks) has been for sellers to lean on the market when it rallies (5 out of the last 7 days). We will want to watch the late afternoon trade (from 2:00 to 3:00 cst) to see if they can hold today’s gains. Failure to do so will improve mortgage pricing while a positive close, especially 50 points or more, will put additional pressure on our stuff.
Technically, the selling today has pushed hourly charts into new sell signals (bearish) yet daily time frames remain neutral. Overall, the charts point to another ½ point of weakness on the 10 year note but will take a back seat to the stock market trade. We also have 31 billion of 7 year notes on the auction block. We’re expecting this to go off without a hitch.
I’d like to wish you a frightening day tomorrow and the best sugar high Halloween ever.
