Thursday, April 14, 2011

Mortgage Rates


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




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Thursday, April 14, 2011


Prior to 8:30 this morning the 10 yr note traded slightly better with stock index futures weaker. At 8:30 weekly jobless claims were expected to have increased 3K but jumped 27K back above 400K to 412K; continuing claims however declined from 3.73 mil to 3.68 mil. The 4 wk average increased 5K. Also at 8:30 March producer price index was expected up 1.0%, as reported up 0.7%, the core excluding food and energy was expected up 0.2% but increased 0.3%. Yr/yr overall PPI +5.8% while the yr/yr core +1.9%, up 0.1% frm Feb.

The 10 yr note fell below 3.50% yesterday to 3.46% breaking the near term resistance, this morning after the 8:30 data the rate fell to 3.43% and mortgage prices at 8:45 +4/32 (.12 bp). The 10 yr technicals looking better after two weeks of selling and increasing rates. The stock index futures were pushed lower on the data this morning, at 8:45 the DJIA off 47. As long as equity markets stay weak the bond and mortgage markets will do better.

Obama's call for raising taxes by focusing on spending in the tax code was immediately rejected by top Republicans, signaling that any effort to increase the government’s take from the economy would be difficult to move through Congress. What a surprise! Obama said he wanted Congress to overhaul the tax code by lowering rates, eliminating tax breaks and generating more money than the current system does. The plan would allow tax cuts affecting high-income taxpayers to expire at the end of 2012 and would raise $1T on top of that. As noted yesterday, the budget battle is hardly beginning. That said, the Presidents speech was overall a good one, well framing the issues but the chasm between those wanting more government and less is wider than the Grand Canyon. Obama set a June deadline for a bipartisan deal to cut the federal deficit and offered a path to get there that was designed to contrast with a Republican proposal he called unfair to the elderly and overly generous to the wealthy; it won't likely be achieved though.

Crude oil, after hitting $113.00 last Friday is slightly lower this morning and has fallen to $107.00. Oil inventory levels were higher than traders expected when data was released yesterday. The decline in the price is mostly speculators heavily leveraged being forced out, but they will be back.

At 9:30 the DJIA opened down 50 points, the 10 yr off its best levels earlier, up 3/32 at 3.45% after touching 3.43%. Mortgage prices at 9:30 +2/32 (.06 bp) also falling back from levels at 9:00.

At 1:00 this afternoon Treasury will auction $13B of 30 yr bonds; yesterday's 10 yr auction was OK but not strong bidding.

While the bond and mortgage markets have improved in the last few days, and the 210 yr note took out its near resistance at 3.50%, the 10 has a very critical resistance at 3.40%. Breaking the 3.40% level will need a continuing decline in US equities which doesn't appear likely although recent selling in stock markets has increased concerns and shaken the strong optimism that has captured investors.

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