I was disappointed to see a few article headlines coming out this afternoon crediting this morning's negative economic data in Europe for an impressive domestic bond market rally.  As you know, I'd be the first to attribute bond market movement in the US to European market influences when it's clearly the case, but it clearly was NOT the case today.  In fact, if we set German Bunds and US 10yr Notes to the same scale of highs and lows before today, you can plainly see US Treasuries moved decisively lower while German Bunds actually WORSENED.  Not only that, but today was a big move in the Treasuries compared to a much smaller move in Bunds.

2014-10-7 US v Germany

What gives then?  A few things.  First of all, remember our recent discussions on bond markets not caring about economic data and instead being dominate by the 'tradeflow' considerations.  Today we had no meaningful economic data and no meaningful market movers.  Yet volume and participation picked up handsomely and movement was swift. 

Tradeflows are the only explanation.  This can be thought of quite simply as market participants making and covering bets intended to make a profit and other market participants being forced to make certain trades due to other activities (like corporate bond market hedging). 

Some of those "bets" could have to do with positioning for tomorrow's FOMC Minutes.  This makes good enough sense considering the Announcement itself was a negative day for bond markets and the speculation was that the Fed was actually more dovish than the market reaction would suggest.  Perhaps traders think the Minutes are about to prove that point.  Or perhaps we're simply getting back in line with the existing long-term trend in 2014 and nothing more complex than that.

Either way, we'll take it.  10yr yields hit their 3pm closing mark very close to their lowest levels in 16 months (-7 bps at 2.35, and they're moving lower after hours, now down to 2.339).  MBS rallied strongly as well, but couldn't keep up with Treasuries.  Fannie 3.5s are heading out the door up 14 ticks compared to 10yr's 23 tick gain (in price).


MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
MBS
FNMA 3.0
99-27 : +0-17
FNMA 3.5
103-07 : +0-13
FNMA 4.0
106-07 : +0-08
Treasuries
2 YR
0.5080 : -0.0280
10 YR
2.3410 : -0.0790
30 YR
3.0480 : -0.0790
Pricing as of 10/7/14 4:33PMEST

Today's Reprice Alerts and Updates
A recap of Alerts and Updates provided to MBS Live subscribers.
12:58PM  :  3yr Auction Preview
10:48AM  :  Big Trades + Slow Market = Big Moves This Morning
9:07AM  :  Treasuries Resist European Bond Market Weakness Overnight

MBS Live Chat Highlights
A recap of featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBS Live Dashboard.
Daniel Kramer  :  "chase improved pricing another .251 bps from 2nd rate sheet,and .374 bps overall today improvment, much better"
Matthew Graham  :  "they said don't sweat it in June 2013"
Louie Colatriano  :  "crazy, 3 weeks ago we were running at 6 month lows and today a 12 month high..."
Dan Clifton  :  "MG, for us less than uber smart people, can you expand on Gundlach and Gross reference below"
Matthew Graham  :  "main thing is to keep an open mind and not assume the way it was = the way it will be. That sets people up to get badly burned. Gundlach, Gross in 2013 for instance. 2 guys with enough street cred to boldly call the market based on what they saw. "
Hugh W. Page  :  "I have no idea what I believe anymore when it comes to rates"
Hugh W. Page  :  "Mine has changed about 4 times . . ."
Matthew Graham  :  "paradigms have had to change over the past 5 years"
Hugh W. Page  :  "Still seems unreal to me that QE is about to end, UE Rate is in the 5's, we just came off a 4%+ print on GDP, and rates are still this low."
Victor Burek  :  "definitely not time to lock"
Matthew Graham  :  "the fact that it's still in energizer bunny mode could be working against us."
Matthew Graham  :  "as you know, a lot of lenders wait for the rally to level off or turn a corner"
Victor Burek  :  "I'm sure they will pass along another .125 anytime now"
DIRK POSTUPACK  :  "we should be up .375 today VB"
Matthew Graham  :  "well, give it time. Like I said, they'll either reprice or let it trickle in slowly tomorrow, but again... pushing the lowest levels of the year, it's going to be slow going moving lower."