Today's jobs data was every bit as strong as the last one was weak.  Remember that?  A month ago, the thesis was that there were no silver linings in the report, and that it raised serious questions about the Fed's rate hike intentions.  This time around there were no caveats in the report, and it left no doubt as to the Fed's green light.

It's been interesting to consider just how strong today's report was in light of some of the comments leading up to it.  This began with several Fed officials talking about how low job growth could be without fundamentally altering the read on the labor market.  They were throwing out numbers anywhere from 100-150k payrolls.  Those comments in turn prompted market watchers to speculate that the Fed knew something about today's data coming in weak. 

Conspiracy theories are a funny thing.  When I've personally bought into them, it's always due to a lack of understanding or a lack of any other satisfying way to explain what I'm seeing.  To many, the fact that the Fed seemed to be defending 100-150k jobs creation didn't make sense.   The only way it would have made sense would be if you agreed with my thesis that the Fed had seen all they needed to see in order to hike and that they were merely reminding markets not to get carried away if the number happened to come in much lower than expected.

As it turns out, their reminders were completely unnecessary.  Do you think the Fed still would have thrown out those sorts of reminders if they knew the report would utterly crush expectations?  Of course not.  Reminding someone how low the bar is for action only adds to the volatility of their response when they see how  easily the bar was cleared.  In other words, if 100-150k jobs would have been enough, what does 271k jobs mean?! 

The benefit of all this is that we got to see exactly what it looks like for markets to price in the highest possible likelihood of a December rate hike as of November 6th, 2015.  It looks like today's closing levels of 2.325 in 10yr yields and 103-10 in Fannie 3.5s.  For 10yr Treasuries, it's the weakest close in 3 months.  For 2yr Treasuries (more in tune with Fed rates), it's the weakest close in more than 5 years. 

Bottom line, last week's FOMC Announcement was a potential game-changer and only an exceptionally weak NFP could have stood in the way.  NFP instead stepped aside and allowed the "full game-changer" impact of the announcement to hit trading screens.


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
100-02 : -0-18
FNMA 3.5
103-10 : -0-15
FNMA 4.0
105-31 : -0-10
Treasuries
2 YR
0.8900 : +0.0600
10 YR
2.3250 : +0.0890
30 YR
3.0860 : +0.0840
Pricing as of 11/6/15 5:24PMEST

Today's Reprice Alerts and Updates
A recap of Alerts and Updates provided to MBS Live subscribers.
8:31AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Payrolls Crushes Consensus; Good Night Sweet Bond Market

MBS Live Chat Highlights
A recap of featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBS Live Dashboard.
Andy Pada, Jr.  :  "MND on cnbc"
Matt Hodges  :  "purchase vol increasing, refi negligible except for divorces"
Jason Anker  :  "seasonal, nothing new going on"
Gary Bracht  :  "MP no reduction"
Marc Perez  :  "Question for all Loan Originators: are you seeing a decrease in production in your pipelines? If so, are attributing the decline to the seasonal doldrums (ie moving closer to the holidays) or TRID on new applications?"
aaron meyer  :  "assets to offset will help a lot"
Jason Anker  :  "if UW says its OK"
Davidson Trisler  :  "can you exclude an installment loan with 6 months left for an FHA loan?"
Matthew Graham  :  "though I don't think we have the same downside we had then"
Matthew Graham  :  "substantially similar"
Andy Pada, Jr.  :  "how similar has this movement been to the taper leadup?"