MBSonMND: MBS RECAP
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Pricing as of 4:00 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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3:44PM :
Debt Super-Committee Vexes Even Lobbyists
(Reuters) - Thousands of lobbyists are scrambling to influence the work of a congressional "super committee" given the job of identifying up to $1.5 trillion in deficit reductions. The committee is is due to report its findings by Thanksgiving and with such massive potential cuts to the U.S. federal budget being decided by just a handful of lawmakers in such a short timeframe, lobbyists say the mission to protect their clients' interests is unprecedented and potentially impossible. "Anyone who tells their client they have figured out how to influence this process is either lying -- or you should hire them," said Joel Johnson, a managing director at the Washington lobbying shop The Glover Park Group and a veteran of the Clinton White House and Capitol Hill. Johnson said when federal funds are being targeted in traditional congressional committees, work is more predictable with lobbyists knowing there are a handful of lawmakers who can be approached on any given issue that will determine the outcome. This special bipartisan committee, made up of six Republican and six Democratic lawmakers, was formed as part of the deal to raise the U.S. debt limit. It will meet independently from Congress, set its own rules and must come up with at least $1.2 trillion -- and potentially $1.5 trillion -- in budget savings for the next decade. If it fails, or if Congress does not endorse its plan, $1.2 trillion in mandatory cuts will be triggered in 2013. "It's absolutely on an unprecedented scale. This is deficit reduction. It will touch every industry, every spending category. This has not happened before. So everyone is in the position of determining the art of the possible in terms of influencing the outcome." Jack Howard, a lobbyist at Wexler & Walker with close ties to four of the committee's Republican members, said of the super committee and its mandate: "I've been in this town 32 years. It beats anything I've seen."
3:37PM :
10yr TSYs Hit 3pm Mid-Range. Volume Non-Existent. MBS Limping
This has been one of the slowest volume days of the year. Gotta go back to late April to see slower. Things have traded technically as well with 10yr notes hitting the 3pm close inside the technical trend we've been tracking today and currently at 2.277. S&P's are making a push for their highest close since first plummeting toward 1200 from 1260 at the beginning of the month. There's hourly resistance at 1206+ and the highest recent daily close was 1204+. All that's splitting hairs though, considering volume. In general, things looks technically traded in stocks as well, with the low 1200's on the upside and 1120's on the downside. MBS are limping toward the finish line near their lows of the day, but to continue a common theme, the volume is so low that it just doesn't much matter. At this point, we're discussing prices and levels merely as a matter of protocol, and will have to wait at least until tomorrow before seeing where markets really want to be. But for sake of that protocol, Fannie 4.0's are down 12 ticks at 103-14 and 3.5's are down 11 ticks at 100-15. We'd normally wonder about reprices at the lows of the day, but that doesn't feel like a logical risk right now.
3:15PM :
Irene Restarts Washington Budget Battle
(Reuters) - Washington's never-ending budget battle threatened to snarl the recovery from Hurricane Irene as a top Republican said on Monday that any federal aid will have to be offset by spending cuts elsewhere.
"Yes there's a federal role, yes we're going to find the money. We're just going to make sure that there are savings elsewhere," Representative Eric Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House of Representatives, told Fox News.
Irene killed at least 21 people and caused substantial property damage from North Carolina to Vermont over the weekend. Cantor's Virginia district was among the areas hit by the storm as well as the epicenter of an earthquake last week.
Obama administration officials said they had no estimate of the storm's cost as they were still assessing the damage, but other elected officials and companies have indicated that it will likely amount to billions of dollars.
The administration will likely have to ask Congress for additional funding at a time when lawmakers are debating further budget cuts.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has suspended funding for some rebuilding programs from earlier disasters to ensure that its disaster-relief fund will not run out of money, according to agency administrator Craig Fugate.
FEMA currently has $972 million in the fund, according to congressional Republicans.
President Barack Obama has signed declarations committing the federal government to help states from North Carolina to New Hampshire cover disaster-response costs.
2:06PM :
MBS, Treasury Losses Moderate After Stocks Stall
After hitting nearly 2.29, 10yr yields are back down to 2.266 and MBS are back near their higher levels of the past 5 hours. For 4.0's that's 103-19 and 100-21 for 3.5's. This comes on the heals of the S&P's failure to break through levels from 8/17 around 1206. Remaining lower than that keeps the index range bound for most of the month and bond markets seem to be watching, themselves rangebound over the same time period. The moderation of earlier weakness greatly decreases the risks of reprices for the worse and makes the charts currently look more in line with reprices for the better. But the story in stocks has yet to play out. With 2 hours left, an index value of 1204.54 is well within striking distance of the breakout. Even so, volume is so appallingly low around the board that whatever happens today is likely of little consequence to the next 3 days, whic in turn are of little consequence versus Friday's NFP.
1:11PM :
Small Business Hiring Slows in August, Wages Dip
(Reuters) - Hiring by small businesses slowed in August and employers reduced hours, an independent survey showed on Sunday, suggesting the recent stock market turmoil may have dampened job creation.
Intuit, a payrolls processing company, said small businesses added 35,000 jobs after increasing employment by 40,000 in July.
The survey is based on responses from about 66,000 employers at businesses with fewer than 20 employees that use the Intuit Online Payroll system and covered the period from July 24 to August 23.
"There was plenty of bad news this month and the Intuit small business employment figures show this," said Susan Woodward, the economist who helped to develop the survey. "From this month's numbers, we don't see a new recession, but we don't see a robust recovery either." According to a Reuters survey, nonfarm payrolls probably increased 80,000 this month after July's 117,000 gain.
Three of the 62 economists polled predicted a contraction in nonfarm employment this month, citing the erosion of business confidence and a strike by 45,000 Verizon Communications workers during the payrolls survey period.
They cautioned, however, that a drop in August employment should not be interpreted as a sign the economy was back in recession. The economy grew at a 1 percent annual rate in the second quarter after expanding only 0.4 percent in the January to March period. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Dan Grebler)
12:54PM :
ALERT:
Stocks, Bond Yields at Highs of the Day. MBS Mixed to Weaker
S&P's are at their best levels of the day at 1203.51 and while 10yr yields aren't at their absolute highest yields of the day, they're at their highest point relative to a supportive line that has kept them contained since 8/11, currently at 2.28. Fannie 3.5's are about mid range at 100-18 while Fannie 4.0's are near their lower end at 103-15. Which one to trust as far as being indicative of reprice considerations today? Well, we do know that 3.5's still aren't being meaningfully originated in the secondary market, but that's not to say that loans eligible for that coupon (3.75-4.125%) aren't getting written. 3.5's matter to whatever extent you're seeing 4.125% or less on rate sheets as being viable options. Whatever the case, 4.0's certainly matter enough to be concerned that they're near their lows. It's not unheard of to see lenders get a bit more defensive than they otherwise might be simply due to a weak 10yr benchmark (not common though!). Still, we're starting to get slightly anxious about reprices for the worse and will label this an alert because of that, but we won't start anticipating that reprices are flat-out LIKELY until we see a definitive break below 103-15 in 4.0's, 100-16 in 3.5's or a break above 2.28 in 10yr yields (a move that would likely foreshadow the aformentioned moves in MBS). So if you're on the edge of a lock decision, market movements say you're OK for now, but lender behavior might vary in rare cases, and then becoming less rare if those lock targets are broken.
11:16AM :
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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Ethan Brizzi : "Another PF reprice, now .25% better on the day"
BVG : "Provident Funding must need some loans 2nd improvement today...+.25 total"
Ken Crute : "yep, caught me a few times, current balance + interest + closing costs + prepaids cannot increase 1st by more than $5k, "
Steven Stone : "thanks!"
Ken Crute : "don't forget can't increase 1st by more than $5k of current balance "
Matt Hodges : "SS - first look at the VA statute: 55-58.3 so you understand it - r/t refi only, $150 2nd cap"
Steven Stone : "yeah that would be awesome! actually if you could get it in all of the states up and down the east coast lol"
Ken Crute : "my VA Brothers, Hodgy is right, VHDA will not allow its 2nd to be subordinated "
Matt Hodges : "SS: I helped get the law expanded in VA - if you want help with a bill in your state, be glad to assist"
Matthew Graham : "FYI, week over week, about 85 mln new originations in 3.5's versus 1.7 bln 4.0's in fannie and freddie 30yr fixed"
Matt Hodges : "no, i'd try - to count on my recollection being accurate"
Jason York : "hmm, that sucks, anyone who does a VHDA loan is pretty much stuck then"
Matt Hodges : "it may be in the note from VHDA and your title company or u/w didn't check it"
Jason York : "I could have sworn I'd done one before, and we did the automatic subordination and it closed fine"
Steven Stone : "virginia has some form of automatic subordination?"
Matt Hodges : "yes, i recall that is accurate - check the statute 55-58.3"
Jason York : "hodge, have you heard anything about VHDA not having to follow the automatic subordination lay of Virginia"
Brett Boyke : "Unfortunately for us we are now in another wait and see period for the next 3 weeks until the FOMC meeting. More QE was left as an option at the, and the speculation will only intesify with a poor NFP read."
Matthew Graham : "the two time frames don't line up perfectly in all regards, but it's definitely some cold water on the hell-in-a-handbasket reading"
Matthew Graham : "anyway, when it looked like jobs were on the uptick coming out of that recession, they also dropped 3 times in a row on the 4 cycle moving average, but then rebounded"
Matthew Graham : "just like brief period of pos/neg in 2010 for the current cycle"
Matthew Graham : "brief period of pos/neg in 02/03"
Matthew Graham : "last major dip in NFP was 2001"
Matthew Graham : "here's another take though... I found a case for a more bullish reading of labor trends"
Matthew Graham : "last time it did that was in August 2010, and then went negative in September"
Victor Burek : "the guy appointed this morning as head econ advisor developed the plan"
Matthew Graham : "here's something interesting, the 4 cycle average on NFP has declined 3 times in a row"
Victor Burek : "there was talk this morning that the jobs plan might be a $5000 tax credit for each employee hired"
Chris Kopec : "I only mention it because I recall last winter, when Obama/GOP agreed on extending Bush tax rates, that the equities market went ape-(blank), and Treasuries cratered......and this news was entirely predictable as far as I was concerned."
Chris Kopec : "How much are people reading into Obama's post-labor day jobs plan?"
Matthew Graham : "I don't know if this reading will be low, but in general we are trending lower and it's likely (VERY likely) to result in a negative reading soon"
Victor Burek : "possibly a neg number?"
Andrew Horowitz : "i agree MG I expect a low number"
Matthew Graham : "I will say this for the technical reading though. I can't find any other spot in history that looks like this that then went on to improved readings"
Matthew Graham : "purely technical though"
Matthew Graham : "which seems to suggest 20-40k reading"
Matthew Graham : "july looks like an outlier to the core trend"
Matthew Graham : "only may/june have moved in same direction this year"
Victor Burek : "debt debate going on...govt scarying the heck out of everyone..i would think most companies put off hiring"
Chris Kopec : "VB...you feel pretty strong on that?"
Victor Burek : "no way we see over 100k"
Matthew Graham : "80k"
Chris Kopec : "What's the consensus on NFP this Friday? (roughly)."
Matthew Graham : "next stop is something around 1200"
Matthew Graham : "big bounce at 1151, then 1174 ish"
Matthew Graham : "I think a bit of Irene relief (if that's what you were referencing. also, highly highly technical move in stocks"
Chris Kopec : "So, MG....is this mainly relieft rally (could have been a lot worse?)....seems like consumer spending was on the screws this morning."
Matthew Graham : "markets seem to simply be trading to logical technical limits with little motivation/purpose"