MBS Live: MBS Morning Market Summary
Volatility continues to keep MBS prices and Treasury yields on their toes, dancing back and forth over unchanged levels, but this is a relative blessing compared to the Treasury activity in the overnight session.  The MBS Live updates below go into greater detail explaining the big swings overnight and this morning, but the two key considerations look to be the ECB/German Constitutional Court debate over the implementation of Europe's latest "OMT" bond-buying program and to a lesser extent, the tactical trading surrounding this morning's Fed buyback in 25-30yr maturities.  The latter is relatively easy to understand.  Domestic traders were greeted with higher yields in the morning and sought to take them higher still in order to maximize short covering profit (or even to set up new longs considering the closeness of 2.291 to the 2.31 technical target for such things), and had every intention of bouncing back into the Fed's scheduled buying.  Around the same time of morning as the Fed buyback, ECB's Asmussen was offering counterpoints to the Court's overnight arguments that the success of ECB programs doesn't mean the Court has to approve them as constitutional.   Movements in Euros and related risk markets seem to suggest those comments were at least partially effective in undoing some of the overnight damage, but domestic momentum and tactical trading consideration no doubt helped the cause. 
MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
FNMA 3.0
100-00 : +0-00
FNMA 3.5
103-07 : -0-01
FNMA 4.0
105-09 : -0-01
FNMA 4.5
106-21 : -0-02
GNMA 3.0
101-14 : +0-02
GNMA 3.5
104-17 : -0-04
GNMA 4.0
106-00 : +0-00
GNMA 4.5
106-19 : -0-03
FHLMC 3.0
99-23 : +0-01
FHLMC 3.5
103-02 : -0-01
FHLMC 4.0
105-08 : +0-02
FHLMC 4.5
105-23 : -0-03
Pricing as of 11:07 AM EST
Morning Reprice Alerts and Updates
Below is a recap of instant Reprice Alerts and updates issued via email and text alert to MBS Live subscribers this morning.

10:44AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Majority of Losses Recovered into Fed Buyback and ECB Comments
Although both MBS and Treasuries are still in negative territory on the day, a majority of the earlier weakness has been erased--at least for now. From lows of 102-27, Fannie 3.5s are back up to 103-05--a mere eighth of a point weaker on the day. 10's are down to 2.22after hitting 2.291 overnight.

The timing of the biggest move overnight clearly suggests the ECB / German Constitutional Court as a factor today. Whereas the overnight move was a knock against the ECB's ability to support markets, recent headlines from the debate go some small way toward moderating the previous one-sidedness. More simply, the court wants to limit ECB bond-buying, and now the ECB is making a case for it to be unlimited. Bond markets suffered on the news earlier and have benefited from the recent shift in tone.

Additionally beneficial is the Fed's scheduled buying in the 25-30yr space. There was reason to believe the last big push to the highest yields this morning was to help set up for this buyback. Now the question becomes: will the momentum carry through the 11:03am results? Or will excess inventory suggest short term resistance for falling yields.

Several lenders who priced early stand a chance to reprice positively at currently levels, but we would note that reprice activity tends to be relatively more subdued on MBS roll days.
10:09AM  :  ECON: Wholesale Inventories As Expected, Sales Stronger
- Inventories +0.2 vs +0.2 forecast
- Sales +0.5 vs +0.0 forecast

- Market reaction: not readily discernible from movement and volume, but there's an outside chance that this caused a minor "risk-on" move, adding maybe 1bp to tsy yields and a point to S&Ps. That's close enough to 'no reaction' to be considered as such.

The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that April 2013 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 $416.6 billion, up 0.5 percent (+/-0.5%)* from the revised March level and were up 0.7 percent (+/-3.2%)* from the April 2012 level. The March preliminary estimate was revised downward $0.7 billion or 0.2 percent. April sales of durable goods were up 1.6 percent (+/-1.1%) from last month and were up 4.2 percent (+/-4.0%) from a year ago. Sales of furniture and home furnishings were up 5.1 percent from last month and sales of machinery, equipment, and supplies were up 5.0 percent. Sales of nondurable goods were down 0.5 percent (+/-0.4%) from March and were down 2.2 percent (+/-3.9%)* from last April. Sales of apparel, piece goods, and notions were down 6.0 percent from last month and sales of petroleum and petroleum products were down 2.7 percent.

Total inventories of merchant wholesalers, except manufacturers’ sales branches and offices, after adjustment for seasonal variations but not for price changes, were $504.8 billion at the end of April, up 0.2 percent (+/-0.2%)* from the revised March level and were up 4.1 percent (+/- 4.7%)* from the April 2012 level. The March preliminary estimate was revised downward $0.4 billion or 0.1 percent. April inventories of durable goods were up 0.2 percent (+/-0.4%)* from last month and were up 5.9 percent (+/-5.6%) from a year ago. Inventories of motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts and supplies were up 1.9 percent from last month, while inventories of metals and minerals, except petroleum were down 1.1 percent. Inventories of nondurable goods were up 0.1 percent (+/-0.4%)* from March and were up 1.4 percent (+/-5.8%)* from last April. Inventories of beer, wine, and distilled alcoholic beverages were up 2.3 percent from last month.
9:14AM  :  Bond Markets Hit Hard Overnight, Support May be In
Treasuries faced a double whammy overnight as both Asian and European sessions provided reasons to sell. The first key event was the decision by the bank of Japan to forgo any further stabilization measures and to leave monetary policy unchanged. 10yr Treasuries actually weathered that initial storm fairly well, though it did account for yields remaining relatively higher than they otherwise would be considering recent correlation with Japanese markets (in other words, a strengthening of the Yen and tanking of the Nikkei has had a more salubrious effect in general than it did last night.

This bigger factor overnight was Europe. In fact, compared to the onset of German Bund trading, Japanese market movement looks downright flat. Bunds opened up and took Treasuries on a fantastic voyage (fantastically awful). The initial catalyst here was a comment from German Constitutional Court President Vosskuhle (who incidentally is one of the biggest market movers you've never heard of owing to the court's role in approving the constitutionality of ECB bond-buying programs... Who knew?!) who said that the extent to which the ECB's programs are successful has nothing to do with whether or not they're constitutional. In other words, central bank market-soothing and liquidity could be stifled on a matter of German principal.

Bunds were on the ropes from that point on and pulled US Treasuries with them. Futures volumes were bug though 2.264 managed to hold AT FIRST. Domestic traders took the sell-off to weaker levels (trend is your friend). Hopefully the logic at play here is that bond markets were reaching for the best supportive ceiling available (to cover shorts / reload longs / pick up some supply to sell back to Fed later this morning).

If that's the case, it's going well so far with 10's back down to 2.244 from 2.291 overnight. MBS, for their part, went a little bit crazy at the open, experiencing a relatively higher degree of price volatility in the first few minutes than Treasuries, but are mostly back in line with broader bond markets now (keep in mind that 4.0s are almost an equal partner to 3.5s at these levels). To that end Fannie 3.5 have been holding near 102-30 so far and Fannie 4.0s have been doing the same just over 105-03.

MBS performance vs Treasuries is within it's right to disconnect today as tonight's Class A Roll (Fannie/Freddie 30yr Fixed Settlement; today's the last day of trading for June coupons) leaves less room for flexibility in prices of June coupons.
Live Chat Featured Comments
A recap of the featured comments from the MBS Live Dashboard's Live Chat feature, utilized by hundreds of industry professionals each day.

Matthew Graham  :  "it does, but not as much as the specific maturity range in question."
William Packer  :  "Matt, so when that happens the other paper of 10 year etc does not respond? "
Matthew Graham  :  "William, same thing I said earlier this morning when you mentioned the 30yr. There's a Fed buyback going on right now."
William Packer  :  "30 yr up?? Quite the rally there on that treasury. But everything else negative. Seems crooked"
Matthew Graham  :  "Eurodollars just hit highest levels since February (before Italian election drama)"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ASMUSSEN SAYS ECB WOULD REACT IF STATES FOR INSTANCE SHIFTED ALL THEIR DEBT ISSUANCE TO SHORT MATURITIES "
John Tassios  :  "Looks like those comments had positive effect on markets / Asmussen has that kind of power over there with German Central Bank?"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ECB'S ASMUSSEN SAYS THERE IS NO RISK OF OMT SPURRING INFLATION "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ASMUSSEN SAYS OMT PROGRAMME IS DE FACTO LIMITED BY FOCUS ON SHORT-TERM MATURITIES "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ECB'S ASMUSSEN TELLS GERMAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT THE ECB BOND-BUYING SCHEME NEEDS TO BE UNLIMITED TO SHOW ECB SERIOUS ABOUT DEFENDING PRICE STABILITY "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL WHOLESALE SALES +0.5 PCT (CONSENSUS UNCH) VS MARCH -1.4 PCT (PREV -1.3 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL WHOLESALE INVENTORIES +0.2 PCT (CONSENSUS +0.2 PCT) VS MARCH +0.3 PCT (PREV +0.4 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "Well, I wouldn't say baffled. The pace of the snap back from May1 trend test is about the same as the snap back from March 11th trend test. What I didn't think would happen so soon would be a convicted move through the trend."
FPH  :  "ok, as long as your are even slightly baffled by the speed of our movement, I am a bit calmed. I understand we were not totally blindsided by this, but we need Micahel Orr to give us some protection."
Matthew Graham  :  "tough answer. Do I claim to understand all the factors in play? No, and I don't think anyone should. Was it on the radar for technical and fundamental reasons? Yes... Several charts and chats discuss the prospects for 2.30 recently. Did i think we'd be here this morning? Not yet, and not for the reasons we ostensibly are."
FPH  :  "MG, this may be the dumbest question I've asked yet, BUT... Does this all of this movement make sense to you?"
Christopher Stevens  :  "need to get to 2.07 so I can get a good nights sleep"
Matthew Graham  :  "need to get to 2.229"
Matthew Graham  :  "oh yeah, I should check to see how that one's holding up. We might have broken it already."
Jeff Anderson  :  "Nice, MG. Nothing like an Ominous Triangle of Death in the Day Ahead to get things started. :)"
Matthew Graham  :  "Actually it was Bernanke's March Q&A, coupled with the April jobs report on May 3rd that got the snowball rolling. Hilsenrath and the Fed just reminded us of why that would be the case throughout mid-May. "
John Tassios  :  "FED was intial snowball maker / esp Bernanke's Q&A last month"
Matthew Graham  :  "indeed SR. Snowball pusher but not snowball maker"
Scott Rieke  :  "That's a symptom, not the illness. Convexity accounts are lagging indicators that spur on a move, but don't make the initial bang"
John Tassios  :  "“Some people are probably concerned that Treasury yields are approaching a level that would trigger convexity hedging, which will push yields even higher,” said Soeren Moerch, head of fixed-income trading at Danske Bank S/A in Copenhagen. “That adds pressure to the market.” As rates increase, the potential for refinancing mortgage bonds and loan-servicing drops, extending the average lives of the securities and leaving holders more vulnerable to losses. Investors then may seek to pare the du"
John Tassios  :  "Treasuries tumbled on concern the biggest monthly surge in yields since December will prompt investors to sell government debt as a hedge against losses on mortgage bonds as borrowing costs climb to a 14-month high. "
Hugh W. Page  :  "Although we’re continuing red for now I think we’re just settling in to a new range in the low to mid 4’s that may be with us the rest of the year. But, if we move too high too fast on the 10 yr historically that crashes stocks and with 80% of earnings preannouncements this Quarter negative the market is vulnerable. Economy still weakfish and it wouldn’t take much to turn sentiment bad. It might not be pretty for the rest of the year but I think we’ll see rates in the 3’s again at some point."
Victor Burek  :  "yields held steady all night til about 4am est...then shot higher...not sure why "
Josh Stika  :  "any rational behind the selloff?"
Victor Burek  :  "we don't roll til tonight"
Andy Pada  :  "how much of this is roll?"
Christopher Stevens  :  "Technical trades on to 10 I'd say. As MG pointed out yesterday the next pressure on the way up is at 2.31 and then 2.40. Lets hope we don't see that. But that 3yr auction could push us up there if its received poorly. "
FPH  :  "Futures off 110 and the 10 year up to 2.27. What give. "
Victor Burek  :  "it was hours earlier"
Jeff Anderson  :  "When was the BOJ decision? "
Victor Burek  :  "10 yr was holding at closing level all night to about 2 hours ago. No idea what happened to cause this rise"
Jeff Anderson  :  "GM, all, OSO. What a worldwide smoke show, other than the aero. Did I miss the end of the financial world last night?"
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "make that 2.27"

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