Monday, October 17, 2011

Market Snapshot 10/17/2011

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Treasuries and MBS markets opened flat early this morning but got some support at 9:00 as stock indexes softened a little. Helping the bond market some this morning, the Oct NY Empire State manufacturing index expected -4.4 frm -8.82% in Sept was -8.48; the sub components were a little better but still very weak. At 9:15 Sept industrial production reported +0.2% right on the forecasts. Sept capacity utilization also in line, at 77.4% frm 77.3% in August. No initial reaction to the reports.



Europe will continue to draw attention this week, it may not be obvious but under the radar and other driving events Europe is still unsettled. Last week markets were enthused on comments that the EU has com up with a plan that includes banks taking huge hits. Over the weekend the has been some push-back from Europe's banks. Opposition from banks may hamper efforts by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy to present a breakthrough at an Oct. 23 summit of euro leaders in combating the crisis, which has driven Greece toward default, roiled global markets and dented confidence in the survival of the 17- nation currency. In the end the situation is still unresolved and is unlikely to be resolved by Oct 23, the so-called date to have it all worked out. The significance is that as long as there is no actual resolution the US interest rate markets and the US equity markets will continue with their volatility.



At 9:30 the DJIA opened -50, the 10 yr +9/32 at 2.22% -3 bps; mortgage prices at 9:30 +4/32 (.12 bp).



This Week's Economic Calendar:

         Today;

           8:30 am NY Empire State index -8.48 frm -8.82

           9:15 am Sept Capacity Utilization 77.4% frm 77.3%

                        Sept industrial production +0.2%

         Tuesday;

           8:30 am Sept PPI (+0.2%, ex food and energy +0.1%)

           10:00 am Oct NAHB housing mkt index (14, unchanged from Sept)

        Wednesday;

           7:00 am weekly MBA mortgage applications

           8:30 am Sept CPI (+0.3%, ex food and energy +0.2%)

                        Sept housing starts and permits( starts +4.0%, permits -1.5%)

          2:00 pm Fed's Beige Book

       Thursday;

          8:30 am weekly jobless claims (unch at 404K)

          10:00 am Sept existing home sales (-1.8%)

                         Oct Philly Feed business index (-9.6 frm -17.5)

                         Sept leading economic indicators (+0.3%)



Treasury 10-year notes better, pushing yields down from the highest level in seven weeks, as concern Europe may take longer to contain sovereign debt turmoil boosted demand for the safest assets. We still believe the 10 yr note yield won't increase past 2.30%; the high in the recent increase has been 2.27%. With continued concerns over how, or if, Europe can solve its debt issues US markets will continue to trade in swings on each comment out of the region. Germany said European Union leaders won’t provide the complete fix to the euro-area debt crisis that global policy makers are pushing for at an Oct. 23 summit.
 

Although there is no way Europe can meet the Oct 23rd target that had been thought, markets still believe some kind of resolution, foreign investors in US bond markets are selling on that belief. The Federal Reserve reported its holdings of U.S. government debt on behalf of central bankers and institutional investors outside America has plunged $76.5B in the last seven weeks, the most since August 2007. At the same time, bond mutual funds are adding Treasuries, banks have increased their holdings 45% in the past five years and the Fed has added $656B to its balance sheet this year.
 Technically the 10 yr note and MBSs are bearish at the moment.

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