| 
   
Today's Rate Volatility: HIGH 
What happened yesterday? 
Mortgage
  backed securities (MBS) lost -49 basis points from Wednesday's close which
  caused 30 year fixed rates to move upward. MBS have now lost a big -135BPS
  from Monday's open to yesterday's close. 
Once
  again, we started the day selling off before our first dose of economic data
  even hit due to the German Bund (there version of our U.S. Treasury 10 Year
  note) saw their yields shoot up on continued optimism for growth in Germany
  and in Europe. This zapped money out of U.S. bonds which caused MBS pricing
  to rise. 
Then,
  Initial Jobless Claims were much better than expected (320K vs estimates of 335K)
  and hit a 6 year low. This is the type of data that traders think will cause
  the Fed to taper in September which of course pressured MBS further. 
Both
  Headline and Core CPI matched market expectations and didn't impact MBS
  pricing. Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization both were a little
  weaker than expected but not by enough to reverse the course of the morning's
  sell off. The Home Builder's Index was much stronger than expected (59 vs est
  56) 
Both
  stocks (DOW -225) and MBS (-49BPS as of 4:00EDT) had a bad day. Remember when
  you could count on these moving in opposite directions? They actually have
  been moving in the same direction more often than not since April. This tells
  us that these markets are not as tethered as they once were and in many cases
  operate independently of each other. 
The
  stock market was under pressure due to earnings reports from CISCO and
  Walmart. The bond market was down due to strength in Europe, a better than
  expected Initial Weekly Jobless Claims report - which in turn led to great
  speculation about the Fed tapering in September. 
Don't miss out on the mortgage industry's premiere insight and commentary. Subscriber to RateAlert Executive today and get today's lock advice, and watch the full Morning Coffee Update video with Bryan McNee - all available only to our Executive subscribers.  | 
 
Monday, August 19, 2013
Rate Volatility
http://globalhomefinance.com
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment