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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2:46PM :
ALERT:
Bonds Break Post-Auction Bear Trend. Reprice Risk Reverses
Following the auction, 10yr notes moved diagonally toward higher rates. Yields formed a triangle with higher lows and lower highs centered on the mid 3.47's. It was the bearish resistance trendline that broke first, and since that break, yields have moved sharply lower (sharp relative to previous trading), and are currently in the mid 3.45's. This levity in Benchmarks allowed MBS to get back to highs of the day, currently at 101-23 in FNCL 4.5's. Whereas we were recently in a position where any additional losses would have resulted in risks of reprices for the worse, we instead find ourselves BACK in the position where we're more likely to see reprices for the better.
2:00PM :
ALERT:
MBS Finally Break Bullish Trend Following Auction. Risk Rising.
We are NOT yet at levels in the FNCL 4.5 that warrant reprices for the worse, but we ARE at the "early warning" stage... An amber alert if you will... Reason being, MBS have held in an exceedingly linear trend channel all morning toward higher prices. Following a relatively weak auction, treasuries took a harder hit than MBS with 10's now up to 3.476. They've been battling to hold 3.48 support as the fail to break below the mid 3.46's. MBS finally conceded enough momentum to move out of their positive trend. Now there's a sideways battle for 101-20. Maybe it holds... maybe it doesn't... It doesn't much matter... If FNCL 4.5's go lower than 101-20, we might see small-scale reprices for the worse. The bigger picture guidance comes now from Friday's NFP. In short, auction supply has now been worked through with an uneventful result. MBS and Treasuries are on a losing streak that's epic in terms of consecutive days, but not-so-epic in terms of severity. Ultimately, auction did absolutely nothing to alter the longer term trends. We say: "yawn....." Bring on NFP. (caveat: this is still the early warning of a shift in momentum... If it materializes, we'll add emphasis)
1:43PM :
Hoenig urges Fed to shrink holdings, raise rates
(Reuters) - An inveterate Federal Reserve advocate of tighter financial conditions on Wednesday renewed his call for higher benchmark interest rates and shrinking the Fed's balance sheet to pre-financial crisis levels.
"With the United States and many world economies experiencing ... growth and with the U.S. financial crisis over, I would expect to see a change in policy in which stimulus put in place at the height of the crisis would be throttled back," Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Thomas Hoenig said in prepared remarks to the London School of Economics.
Hoenig is not a voter on the Fed's policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee this year.
The Kansas City Fed chief has previously called for a modest increase in borrowing costs and expressed his opposition to the Fed's $600 billion bond buying program. His questioning of Fed policy adds to the voices of several other Fed officials who have in recent days called for the program to be scaled back or for the U.S. central bank to tighten financial conditions soon.
(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Neil Stempleman)
1:05PM :
7yr Treasury Note Auction Results
***U.S. SELLS $29 BLN 7-YEAR NOTES AT HIGH YIELD 2.895 PCT, AWARDS 93.86 PCT OF BIDS AT HIGH ***7 yr NOTES BID-TO-COVER RATIO 2.79, NON-COMP BIDS $35.34 MLN *** PRIMARY DEALERS TAKE $12.12 BLN OF 7-YEAR NOTES SALE, INDIRECT $14.31 BLN
12:51PM :
ALERT:
MBS and Treasuries Hit Best Levels Ahead of Auction
After yesterday saw some of the weakest levels in March, MBS and Treasuries have rallied in linear trend channels, even as the 7yr auction looms at 1pm. FNCL 4.5's are up 6 ticks on the day at 101-22 and 10yr notes are 3.35 bps better at 3.4554. We'll be tracking these trend channels and let you know if the supportive bearish lines (lower line in MBS, upper line in tsy yields) break, which would indicate the bullish trends are ending. At that point, we'd be watching for the establishment of a bearish trend, a re-entry into bullish trends, or a sideways range trade heading into Friday's NFP. It's possible we'll see a reprice for the better before or around the time of the auction.
11:50AM :
TARP Watchdog's Parting Shot: 'Too Big to Fail' Remains
(WSJ) - The same "too big to fail" firms that nearly brought down the financial system in 2008 have become bigger and more interconnected and continue to maintain an unfair advantage over smaller competitors, the departing bailout watchdog warned lawmakers Wednesday. In his last day as the special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, Neil Barofsky cautioned a House panel that the federal bailout program mostly benefited Wall Street firms and fell far short in helping Main Street by encouraging greater lending or assisting enough homeowners with troubled mortgages. He also warned that the subsequent Dodd-Frank regulatory-overhaul law has "clearly failed" to damp market expectations that the government will bail out systemically important firms. Credit-rating firms continue to give large financial institutions higher credit ratings based on the existence of an implicit government backstop, while creditors in turn give those firms access to debt at a price that doesn't fully account for the risks created by their behavior, he said.
11:36AM :
20% Downpayment Rule Disrupts FTHB Market: NAHB
A plan unveiled yesterday by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. that would require a minimum 20 percent down payment for "qualified residential mortgages" would disrupt the housing market and jeopardize the economic recovery, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). "By mandating a 20 percent down payment on qualified residential mortgages, the Administration and federal regulators are excluding those without huge cash reserves – which constitutes most first-time home buyers and many middle-class households – from a chance to buy a home," said NAHB Chairman Bob Nielsen, a home builder from Reno, Nev. "Just do the math. First-time home buyers historically average 40 percent of home-buying activity. It would take an average family 12 years to scrape together a 20 percent down payment. This plan is nothing short of an assault on homeownership that could have a long-lasting negative impact on housing for generations to come."
11:34AM :
Builders Urge Orderly GSE Reform Process
Bob Nielsen, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a home builder from Reno, Nev., today issued the following statement on legislative proposals by Congressional leaders to effectively eliminate the role of the GSEs in the U.S. mortgage market: “The National Association of Home Builders strongly supports efforts to modernize the nation’s housing finance system, including reforms to the government sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. We can’t go back to the system that existed before the Great Recession, but it is critical that any reforms be well-conceived, orderly and phased in over time. “Proposals announced today by key Republicans in Congress represent a piecemeal approach to reform that would disrupt the housing market and could push the nation back into a deep recession. These proposals, along with similar plans announced by the Obama Administration in February, show that many policy makers have clearly forgotten housing’s importance to the economy.
“America’s home builders urge the Administration and Republicans in Congress to consider the potential consequences of their proposals. Congress needs to develop a workable housing finance system before it moves forward with policies that would further destabilize a housing market that is already struggling. Housing can be the engine of job growth this country needs, but it can’t fill that vital role if Congress and the Administration make damaging, ill-advised changes to the housing finance system at such a critical time.”
11:17AM :
New MBS Commentary Post
11:03AM :
Bullish Trend in Bonds Meeting Potential Resistance
Overall, it's been a low volatility morning that has seen bonds gradually improve in a narrow trading range. But 10yr benchmarks have seen their first sign of resistance, having bounced 4 times on 3.47, and will need to get through that level in order
for the trend to continue. Yields are currently at 3.476 and FNCL 4.5's are up 4 ticks on the day at 101-19.
Featured Market Discussion
A recap of the featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBSonMND Dashboard
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Bernie : "FAMC reprice #2"
Matthew Graham : "well put CK"
Chris Kopec : "This afternoon is a last-minute gift....one more chance to decide on whether to roll the dice ahead of NFP"
JTB : "Pinnacle .25 better."
Victor Burek : "plaza better"
Matthew Graham : "Pinnacle Better"
Victor Burek : "flag is about .2 to .25 better"
JTB : "Sierra Pac Improvement .2"
Victor Burek : "flagstar better"
Chris Kopec : ""....Three of Ireland’s biggest banks may have to raise a combined 9 billion euros ($12.7 billion) in capital after stress tests are published tomorrow, said five people with knowledge of the matter....."
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-30/bank-of-ireland-two-smaller-banks-said-to-need-12-7-billion-of-capital.html"
Ira Selwin : "They're eating it on their hedge "
Steven Bote : "MMNJ: Yes, but the flipside is the if NFP numbers come out bond-friendly, it's not like they give an IOU for unpassed rebate from previous sessions."
MMNJ : "best in the biz....may not be best priced all the time but they have outstanding service levels"
Bernie : "same here MMNJ...thier desk is slick!"
MMNJ : "I used to trade directly with the WF Mandatory Desk so it was realtime pricing. If market was +8/32 on the FNM 4.500% then i got the carry"
Ira Selwin : "they're not being "stingy'"
Ira Selwin : "You can't look at it like that VB"
Victor Burek : "sure.... but you will agree, they take away much quicker and sooner than they pass along gains"
MMNJ : "VB, it really depends on where they set their pricing when rates came out -- if they were +3/32 when they priced then yes, if they were down -4/32 at pricing time and is now down -8/32, then most probably not"
Bernie : "WF is quick to the worse and slow to the better"
MMNJ : "think about it -- reprice by 25 bps, MBS market takes a dump and they get $20 million in locks that they have to honor because they cannot worsen (reprice negative) quick enough. Happened MANY times"
Victor Burek : "if we were down 8/10 would we have a reprice worse yet?"
MMNJ : "not at all Ira...."
Matthew Graham : "correct"
Ira Selwin : "So it's not a matter of lenders being "stingy" "
MMNJ : "typically Wells needs a 1/4 point move in the MBS (and sustained) for a reprice on the Correspondent biz"
Matthew Graham : "absolutely agreed"
MMNJ : "lol Matt....you will get one here an there.....was talking more in general terms"
Ira Selwin : "They automatically reprice at a certain number"
Matthew Graham : "just sayin..."
Ira Selwin : "MG that was early"
Matthew Graham : "Except the FAMC reprice we already got..."
MMNJ : "no repricing until intraday price resistance targets are sustained for a while. Need to hang in the +8/+10 FNM 4.500 coupon until probably 3:30PM ET"
Bert Swyers : "we need some reprices now"
Matthew Graham : "Keep an eye on 101-20 for each other for a bit as I have to step away briefly. I doubt that would result in reprices for the worse just yet, but it's the railroad switch that could put us on the path toward Reprice Station."
Matthew Graham : "Highest volume in two weeks - 135% of 10-day moving average
"
Edgar : "JTB-exactly. Two refis funding this week and each one has a loan that is 5-7 years old, in the mid 5's on a 30 year fixed. Both getting into a 15 year fixed at a lower rate, shorter term etc."
Andrew Horowitz : "i get that, but there are also a whole heck of a lot of people who have taken serious pay cuts over the course of the past 3-4 years who could really benefit from paying $200 less per month, and then wow look they spend that 200 at the mall win wn for the economy"
JTB : "AH--Rates are low and you are correct that LLPAs have effected the potential benefit to clients. The refi "market" out there today are the clients Edgar mentioned, and those that haven't refi'd in the last 8-ish years. Good Equity, Fiscally responsible, and it is now time for them to get out of their 30 year at 5.25-ish or above and refinance into a 15 year at 4%. Borrow funds at a lower cost and take years off your term."
Edgar : "SB-"ability to approve and fund"-this is really important for every LO when they develop who they want to develop a long term realtionship. Sure there are a ton of 660, FHA etc type borrower's out there but if a LO really thinks long term (long term for this industry) then LOs will realize that it is extremely important to focus your marketing on rock solid clients (high FICOs, high income, lots of money). These people will always have the ability to do a loan and will always be approved. On "
Andrew Horowitz : "Rates from my perspective are still quite low, the bigger issue is the fees that FNMA and FHLMC have attached which excludes too many borrowers from benefitting"
Bert Swyers : "there a lot of people out there that did not refi last year, some people are just lazy or dont pay attention to rates"
JTB : "I agree, Edgar. There are probably a TON of people who could benefit from a refinance, now, but give us a .25 improvement in rate and we'll see it pick up drastically."
Steven Bote : "But the caveat to low rates is ability to approve and fund. If all the proposed legislation goes through, rates could be as low as 3.5% with no points, and it won't matter, because only a small slice of the population will actually be able to qualify. In the end, as always, it's all about benefit."
Andrew Horowitz : "Though the National Association of Realtors said regulators had gone too far, the agencies did leave options on the table to expand QRM. Under one, there they could create a second class of loans that would require some risk retention, but not the full 5%. Under another option, regulators could significantly expand QRM criteria but require more risk retention for any loan outside of that status."
Edgar : "AQ-If 30 year fixed rates drop to 4.50-4.375% (zero points) game on for refi's-until then I expect average volume. I think a lot more people missed out on the early Fall low rates than people think. Going into March all but 1 deal is a refi....so there not dead. It appears to me that those waiting for the sub 4.5% no point loan are starting to realize that a 4.75% loan is better than there current situation. And others are looking at cutting their term from a 30 to a 20, and some down to a 1"
Adam Quinones : "yes 5-10 years"
Ira Selwin : "of course, but what time frame is the wind down"
Victor Burek : "but once they unwind gse... wont more loans fall into that category?"
Ira Selwin : "Am I missing the issue that nahb has with the qrm? If 90% of loans are FHA/GSE ?"