Monday, March 11, 2013
Mortgage Rates
Mortgage Rates
Anthony Hood
Equity Investment Capital
Office: 949-891-0067
Email: tony@equityinvestmentcapital.com
website: www.equityinvestmentcapital.com
Treasuries trading a little weaker early this morning while trade in stock index futures were slightly weaker prior to the 9:30 open. There are no scheduled economic reports today. At 9:30 the DJIA opened -9, NASDAQ -6, S&P -2; 10 yr note unchanged at 2.05% and 30 yr MBSs +4 bp.
After the strong increase in interest rates last week and the stock market running to new all-time highs on the DJIA (S&P still hasn’t made it), this week is likely to see some minor improvement in rate markets while the stock market rests. At least that is what we expect, but until there is a significant decline in stock markets here and globally, interest rates have more propensity to increase than decline much.
Three key data points this week; Feb retail sales, industrial production and factory usage. Congress working on the budget this week; Republican’s plan has no chance with cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, no cuts on Pentagon spending AND no new taxes. Democrat’s plan; increased taxes on high income earners and corporations and no cuts on Medicare or Medicaid, also a non-starter. The two parties are so far apart that a consensus seems highly unlikely. Also this week Treasury auction 3 yr, 10 yr and 30 yr notes and bonds beginning on Tuesday through Thursday. The total of $69B is $10B less than what Treasury has been borrowing in the last six months, the cuts are in the 10 yr and 30 yr auctions.
French industrial production fell more than expected in January as Europe’s second-largest economy teetered on the brink of its third recession in four years. In Germany, after a sluggish in Q4 the Bundesbank predicts it will rebound in the current quarter. Confidence among investors and businesses jumped in February and retail sales rose the most more than six years in January. Still, factory orders unexpectedly fell and industrial production stagnated. The European Central Bank last week cut its forecasts and now expects the euro-area economy, Germany’s biggest export market, to shrink 0.5% this year before growing by 1.0% in 2014. The German economy will expand 0.4% this year, according to the Bundesbank. In China industrial output had the weakest start to a year since 2009 and lending and retail sales growth slowed, although China is still seen as the global economic engine.
Fitch lowered Italy’s sovereign rating to BBB+ from A- with a negative outlook, according to a statement released March 8. That’s three levels above junk and one higher than Spain. Italy’s 10-year yields climbed five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 4.64%. Germany’s 10 yr bund at 1.51% on Friday, this morning 1.52%.
In the US the decline in unemployment and strong increases in non-farm payrolls and private sector jobs surprised about everyone on Friday, (non-farm jobs +236K, non-farm private jobs +246K). The decline in the unemployment rate to 7.7% isn’t as positive as it appears, many simply not looking for a job, that eliminates them from the employment sector. On balance the Feb employment data was much better than had been thought sending interest rates up along with stock indexes. There is little reason now to expect interest rates will decline much on any rallies.
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