MBSonMND: MBS RECAP
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Pricing as of 4:02 PM EST |
Afternoon Market Updates
A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBSonMND Dashboard
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3:35PM :
Continued Drift Downward in Benchmark Yields Spells Additional MBS Gains
10yr yields decidedly into 3.41's now and MBS are happy about that. But this is more like the happiness that comes from the passing of a risky situation and thus MBS are thus far limiting their gains to a 102-04 FNCL 4.5. This is plenty for the previously mentioned lenders who had not yet repriced to get in the game now as well as small encore performances from lenders who only repriced marginally better this morning.
2:49PM :
10yr Notes Sit At 3.42. FNCL 4.5's Holding At 102-00 Or Above
10yr notes have gone no higher than 3.44 and continue to nudge resistance at 3.42. The narrowness of that range has been salubrious for lender reprices so far today and we'd continue to reiterate that point. Any remaining lenders who have not repriced for the better are more and more likely to do so the longer 102-00 holds supportively in FNCL 4.5's. You might even see one of the early repricers who only gave an eighth or so come back for a second pass.
2:09PM :
More Of The Same, But The Same Has Benefitted MBS
It's getting a bit old at this point in the day, but testing of 3.42 resistance is an ongoing phenomenon. 10yr yields made their most serious recent attempt at 3.42 moments ago and MBS hitched a ride up to 102-02 but have since fallen back to 102-00 in FNCL 4.5's as the resistance held firm. Still... We were hopeful that a narrow trading range would continue to benefit MBS, and this has proven true. Little else to report other than the continuation of the narrow sideways trend.
1:32PM :
Resistance Continues To Hold, But MBS Enjoy Decreased Volatility
Decreased Volatility in benchmarks is helping MBS hold a stable trend around 102-00 in FNCL 4.5's. This has led to several lenders repricing for the better, and that could continue to be the case as long as fluctuations in price remain minimal.. That said, the best opportunities for MBS gains are more likely to coincide with a 10yr treasury note that breaks under 3.42, a feat that has so far eluded 10's today.
12:56PM :
ALERT:
Bond Market Fights Back For Another Bout With Resistance
After 10yr yields most recent failure at 3.42, support was not far behind, coming in at 3.44. Although 3.42 is certainly not broken yet, this is precisely the NARROWING OF THE TRADING RANGE we anticipated would be necessary for potential reprices for the better. We've heard of one major bank out with a minor reprice so far, and more may follow, either if the range stays narrow and relatively flat, or if bonds can take it a step further and actually make some gains from here. FNCL 4.5's are at 102-00.
12:23PM :
Treasuries Battle Mid-Range Inflection After Yesterday's Breakout.
The latest MBS Commentary (linked below) shows the 3.42 pivot point in 10yr yields. After seeing this level serve as the outer limit for the previous section of the range that contained the last few weeks of trading, seeing it break, and then seeing yields fall twice this morning to retest, only to meet resistance, it's an uncomfortable first step in the confirmation of the shift we feared yesterday. "Confirmation" in and of itself doesn't mean bonds can't shift right back to the other end of the range, but it at least suggests that 3.42 is an important battle for yields.
12:07PM :
New MBS Commentary Post
11:33AM :
MBS Turn Positive on Treasury Short Covering
Although trading volume remains relatively low, the benchmark 10 year TSY note is off session yield highs and MBS prices are off their lows. The source of this bounce is short covering (profit taking) in the futures market in unison with a down draft in equities, which have cut intraday gains in half on profit taking. Production MBS coupons are now in the green but benchmark 10s have yet to break 3.42% resistance. If 10s break through this inflection level, reprices for the better will be more likely.
11:23AM :
New MBS Commentary Post
Featured Market Discussion
A recap of the featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBSonMND Dashboard
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Adam Quinones : "brutal swing"
Adam Quinones : "90bps on average BB"
Brett Boyke : "showing down about 70bps in YSP for the week"
Victor Burek : "plaza better"
Adam Quinones : "i just updated pricing...on average...we're basically flat on the day"
Bernie : "BOA reprice"
Adam Quinones : "we're in after hours trading now...."
Adam Quinones : "we're sorta drifting higher Steve so it's possible."
Adam Quinones : ""churning profits""
Adam Quinones : "yep...we made all the space this week for one reason....to profit. now we're right back in the middle of the range again. sigh."
Adam Quinones : "when GSE reform is delayed again....it wont matter....they will delay orig. comp regs too."
Steve J. Remy : "VB, I havent heard of of any 203K 5 yrs"
Victor Burek : "what about that earlier question... Does anyone know if lenders will do a 203k on a 5 year ARM?"
Frank Ceizyk : "It depends on everybody's profit and pricing models. Everybody said that having to disclose YSP would be the end of brokers. Just made me more transparent and educated consumers making them trust me more. "
Robert Rippy : "If I have to etch my compensation in stone with my lenders, and my competitor has the ability to adjust on each and every deal then there is no way that we are on equal terms."
PMBANK : "Reprices here we come"
Adam Quinones : "especially when the bias is skewed toward buying"
Adam Quinones : "fewer trades means it's easier to move prices in one direction or another"
Adam Quinones : "yes Bert. Quiet marketplace with bias skewed toward buying"
Bert Swyers : "wow I watch this thing like paint drying and just saw huge jump in 4.5's with no movement in 10 year"
Frank Ceizyk : "was a long exercise to get to JRs comment about confusion over SRP vs YSP by brokers--brokers think it creates an unfair advantage--but the reality it is--it doesn't. still about who provides best benefit to borrower within the confines of their individual profit goals"
Mike Drews : "gmac +.175"
Mike Drews : "GMAC is repricing"
John Rodgers : "Captive lines and table funding is basically a brokered loan. If you have your own lines and sell the loan then it's a secondary market transaction. "
Chris Kopec : "Back in the day, when I was on the lender side, we purchased loans in bulk from correspondents. The prevailing opinion at the time was that the correspondent would need to have used their own funds for the transaction, for a minimum of one day, in order for it not be be treated as a pass-through. Granted, that was a while back, and that was just one legal department's opinion on it."
Robert Rippy : "Who really knows? I thought the skin in the game rule was still up in the air as to what kind of loans that would be required on."
Steve : "if its funded with your money and then you transfer servicing to an investor, i dont think thats a brokered deal is it?"
Justin Bayle : "Rippy, come June if its not considered a broker deal don't you have to keep 2-3% of the loan amount in reserves for 12 months?"
Robert Rippy : "OK experts, tell me the answer to this. If I act as the lender on a loan, how long do I have to service the loan for regulators not to treat the transaction as a broker deal?"
Mike Drews : "10year is about to break out"
Chris Toy : "Provident Bank better"
CSR : "PF +.125"
Chris Kopec : "REPRICE......Sierra Pacific (+15bp)"
Victor Burek : "about .125 better"
Victor Burek : "flagstar reprice"
Terry Colabrese : "Thanks for the easy to understand commentary, MG! It makes sense when you explain it in simple fashion, like that."
Matthew Graham : "20bps, yes"
Andrew Russell : "so we need yield to dip below 3.27"
Matthew Graham : "all I'm saying is that if the lower end of that range fails, and yields dip below 3.27 with decent volume and for a decent amount of time, then the next technical stopping point would be 3.17, really nothing in between"
Matthew Graham : "or 3.27 to 3.57 depending on how far back you go and how much room you allow for overrun"
Matthew Graham : "current range roughly 3.3 to 3.5, "
Steve : "a man after my own heart MG, love to hear you talk of 3.17"
Matthew Graham : "in other words, I think the market would ask for justification if it's to trade higher yields whereas simply seeing a lack of informative data could be enough to test 3.17"
Matthew Graham : "yep, but one of those bear flags that requires motivation in order to confirm bearish trend. If no confirmation, I view it as a positive ground-holding event for bonds"
Adam Quinones : "the pattern is indeed bearish when you look at from purely technical perspective"
Brett Boyke : "by Nic Lenoir of ICAP -
Volatility Observations: Can Rates Swing Without Pain
For technical reasons already discussed, I am generally bearish on US Fixed Income for the near/medium term. What bothers me with the way we have traded is that since December we are essentially stuck in a range which is much more reminiscent of a bear flag than a bottom in the long end. Also, while implied volatility has come in a lot since the local lows of 12/15, realized volatility is actually very high in Fixed"