Monday, April 4, 2011

Mortgage Rates



Anthony Hood
Equity Investment Capital
Office: 949-891-0067
Email: tony@equityinvestmentcapital.com
website: www.equityinvestmentcapital.com




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Monday, April 04, 2011


No market moving news over the weekend, the 10 yr and mortgages opened better this morning after reversing and rallying a little on Friday. There are no economic releases today and this week is thin on measurements of the economy. The stock market is opening slightly better this morning but a little tedious. Later today (7:15 pm) Ben Bernanke will be speaking to the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank Financial Markets Conference in Stone Mountain, Georgia.

Goldman Sachs out revising its outlook for Q1 from +3.5% to +2.5% and commented there are risks to the economic outlook. Goldman believes, as most now are coming around to believing, that the Fed will increase interest rates sooner than what had been expected. Most until recently were thinking the Fed would not increase rates until 2012 or later. Rates going higher around the globe, the US will be forced by inflation concerns and a stronger economic outlook to make the move before the end of this year. The Fed will likely increase rates in the 3rd Q unless there is a huge swing in the economic outlook.

Corporate profits have been the driver for the equity markets and the strong gains on the key indexes, going forward however it will be consumers that will set the tone. With crude oil making new highs almost daily these days and food prices likely to jump substantially over the next few months, will consumers have to retrench? Gasoline prices now over $4.00 in most of the country and escalating commodity prices it is reasonable to believe consumers will cut discretionary spending somewhat. Employment is improving yet still quite weak; the real unemployment rate when discouraged workers and those now with temp jobs are added back the true unemployment rate is at 15%.

Thursday the ECB will meet and will likely increase its base rate. The ECB has telegraphed its intentions to do so for the past two weeks and not likely to change. Not sure yet about the impact on US rates but with most major central banks increasing rates the likelihood that US rates will work lower is extremely high. German 10-year government bonds fell for an eighth day, the longest run of declines since June 2006, as speculation mounted the European Central Bank will increase interest rates

At 9:30 the DJIA opened +14, the 10 yr +5/32 at 3.43% -2 bp and mortgage prices +5/32 (.15 bp).

This Week's Economic Calendar:
Monday;
7:15 pm Bernanke speaks
Tuesday;
10:00 am Mar ISM Services Sector index (59.5 frm 59.7)
2:00 pm Fed minutes from Mar 15th FOMC meeting
Wednesday;
7:00 am weekly MBA mortgage applications
Thursday;
8:30 am weekly jobless claims (-2K to 386K; con't claims 3.70 mil frm 3.714 mil)
3:00 pm Feb consumer credit (+$2.5B, Jan +$5.0B)
Friday;
10:00 am Feb wholesale inventories (+1.0%)

The near term outlook for the rate markets will likely be choppy with not much decline but not much increase either. The outlook however is for rates to edge higher. The 10 yr has successfully held 3.50% twice last week, now a key near term support. As long as it holds mortgage rates will not creep higher but won't decline either. The 10 has resistance at 3.40%, unless there a trend reversal in equities 3.40% will probably hold. The longer outlook for rates is for them to move up as long as the economy remains firm as it is presently.

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