The story so far this morning is as simple as the headline, with the slight addendum being that Chinese economic data actually began the push toward higher yields overnight. But it was indeed Europe which has had the biggest impact so far. The troubles began in mild fashion with a strong Spanish debt auction. When US Treasuries have strong auctions, it's good for yields. Same story with German debt auctions... But the European periphery is more of a proxy for the other side of the risk equation.
When bond auctions in Spain (or Italy, or Greece, et. al) are well-bid, it's generally a net-negative for the so-called "core" debt issuers. The biggest hits are typically taken by the biggest representative of the core: Germany. German Bunds were already weakening significantly overnight, but US Treasuries were doing a fair job of avoiding the spillover. After the ECB announcement and throughout Draghi's press conference, Bunds tanked severely, the Euro skyrocketed, and US debt merely followed a small portion of that movement.
All things considered, to have only sold off to roughly a 1.90% level in 10yr yields is pretty uneventful. Unfortunately, it comes at a time where 10's were hoping to break back below a critical long-term inflection zone in the mid 1.8's. This is not helping. The 30yr Bond Auction at 1pm can either add to this pain or mitigate it. This will be an "either/or" sort of thing with respect to MBS holding their 2-day lows around 104-10, though lenders should be generally less quick to reprice positively given that today is the roll.
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Pricing as of 11:09 AM EST |
- October revised lower from .6 to .3
- Sales +2.3 pct vs +0.6 Consensus
- October sales revised to -0.9 from -1.2
- Sales see largest rise since March 2011
- What this all means: nothing... Not inasmuch as today's trading activity is concerned. It's a 2nd to 3rd tier piece of stale economic data that struggles to impact even calm, bored markets, let alone markets that are reeling from bullish ECB announcements and technical bounces. But it's a piece of scheduled economic data, so here it is:
The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that November 2012 sales of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations and trading-day differences but not for price changes, were $419.3 billion, up 2.3 percent (+/-0.5%) from the revised October level and were up 5.6 percent (+/-0.7%) from the November 2011 level. The October preliminary estimate was revised upward $1.3 billion or 0.3 percent.
. Total inventories of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations but not for price changes, were $498.9 billion at the end of November, up 0.6 percent (+/-0.4%) from the revised October level and were up 7.0 percent (+/-1.2%) from the November 2011 level. The October preliminary estimate was revised downward $1.0 billion or 0.2 percent.
The strain and pain began mainly in Spain. Well... Not really, but a stronger than expected Spanish debt auction added to pressure already in place from stronger Chinese export data. The bigger kick whilst down came from another generally rosy Press Conference with ECB Pres Draghi that began concurrently with the Jobless Claims report at 8:30am.
Claims, though higher than expected, were a complete non-issue this morning, and markets are clearly pre-occupied with two much bigger issues: trading global central bank policy and keeping pace with tradeflows/technicals.
The ECB stuff is easy enough to understand. The ECB didn't lower rates, didn't take the deposit rate into negative territory (both of which were speculated), and Draghi was on record with all manner of economically bullish anecdotes. These included mention that that he didn't see need for any further easing and that the ECB merely needed to "see signs of a recovery" before an exit from accommodative policy (that's a big jump from the US Fed's stance on keeping accommodation in place until well into the recovery).
The tradeflow/technical picture is also fairly straightforward, provided you're up to speed on the long term significance of the mid 1.8's zone in 10yr yields. With some exceptions, it's been the dividing line between the past 7 months of bond market repression and the previous 7 months of "only moderate repression."
Failure to break definitively back underneath 1.865 yesterday was bad enough, but this morning's bounce up to 1.90+ is ominous. Markets are attempting to convince us that the long term interest rate lows are in as of mid 2012, and to confirm that possibility with a sustained break over the inflection point in the mid 1.8's. Scary times...
Intraday yields were as high as 1.975 last week, so we got that going for us. If we don't sell off another 7 bps today, we'd at least have a "lower high" coming down from there, but the bigger deal is likely still the 1.86+ break. It was a ceiling before, and now to see it acting as a floor (providing a bounce even...) is very unfriendly from a technical perspective.
Fannie 3.0s are down 9 ticks at 104-10 and 10yr yields are currently up 4.5 bps at 1.9047. The next biggie this afternoon is the 30yr Bond auction, but we're not sure that has the potency to spark a move back under 1.865 unless we were to start moving that direction now, and for other reasons. As of now, we're just edging into the weakest levels of the morning. There's even a slight risk that the earliest priced lenders are already considering a negative reprice.
- Continued Claims fell 127k, largest drop since Jan 2011
- Continued Claims lowest since July 2008
In the week ending January 5, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 371,000, an increase of 4,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 367,000. The 4-week moving average was 365,750, an increase of 6,750 from the previous week's revised average of 359,000.
The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 2.4 percent for the week ending December 29, a decrease of 0.1 percentage point from the prior week's unrevised rate. The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending December 29 was 3,109,000, a decrease of 127,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 3,236,000. The 4-week moving average was 3,197,250, a decrease of 26,000 from the preceding week's revised average of 3,223,250.