Some Selling Pressure After Auction and Fed Minutes

Some Selling Pressure After Auction and Fed Minutes

There were no market-moving economic reports scheduled for today regardless of the government shutdown. That left the focus entirely on the afternoon events: the 1pm 10yr Treasury auction and the 2pm release of the Fed Minutes (a more detailed account of the Fed meeting 3 weeks ago). The auction was slightly weaker than expected, which accounted for most of the upward pressure in yields in the afternoon. The minutes didn’t help (even if they didn’t necessarily hurt). Notable comments included mention of a few members who would have been OK with no rate cut and a majority of members remaining concerned about inflation. 

Market Movement Recap

09:27 AM modestly stronger overnight and holding so far.  MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr down 2.4bps at 4.103

12:01 PM Near weaker levels.  MBS up 1 tick (.03) and 10yr down 0.9bps at 4.118

01:03 PM No major reaction to middle-of-the-road auction.  10yr down 1bp at 4.117 and MBS up 1 tick (.03)

01:59 PM MBS are 1 tick lower (.03) and 10yr yields are 0.4bps higher at 4.131

02:40 PM Slight additional selling after Fed Minutes.  MBS down 3 ticks (.09) and 10yr up 0.6bps at 4.133

Mortgage Rates Remain Steady

Mortgage rates technically ticked a hair lower today, but it’s more accurate to view them as being broadly sideways. Some lenders issued improvements yesterday afternoon.  Those lenders were closer to unchanged this morning.   As of this afternoon, several lenders have already issued slight rate increases due to weakness in the bond market.   Bonds dictate rates. Today, bonds took cues from two main events in the afternoon.  The first was a scheduled auction of 10yr Treasuries. Auction demand was slightly weaker than expected. This pushes Treasury yields higher and Treasury yields correlate with mortgage rates.  An hour later, the Fed released the minutes from the last Fed meeting 3 weeks ago. The minutes painted a slightly less rate-friendly picture than was in place at the time. This created a bit of extra weakness in the bond market, but only by a barely detectable amount. All told, the bonds that specifically pertain to mortgage rates were right at the same levels seen during the same time frame yesterday afternoon.  In general, that will equate to mortgage rates being at the same levels as well.

Trading, Non-QM, Fraud Detection Tools; Equifax’s Price Cut; Webinars and Events

We’re sailing through autumn. Places like Seattle and Minneapolis are losing 3-5 minutes of sunlight a day. Donald Trump told Congress to end changing clocks, but is seems that most states will still do it (“spring ahead, fall back”) November 2. Time flies, and we’re 23 days away from Halloween. Despite how it’s celebrated by 5-year-olds and their parents, frat houses, or at many malls around the U.S., is thought to come from the festival of Samhain among the Celts of ancient Britain and Ireland. Its history also mentions the eve of the Western Christian feast of All Hallows’ Day, and the beginning of the observance of Allhallowtide, the time in the Christian liturgical year dedicated to remembering the dead, including saints, martyrs, and all the faithful departed. For something more current, today’s Lenders One’s Mortgage Matters features Kyle Draper, real estate leader, coach, and speaker at 2PM ET, and tomorrow’s “The Big Picture” at 3PM ET features Meredith Whitney, “The Oracle of Wall Street,” of the Meredith Whitney Advisory Group will discuss “Stuck in Place” dynamics, CRE stress, and whether policy can help unlock supply. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s are sponsored by Truework, the only all-in-one, automated VOIEA platform that helps mortgage providers achieve up to 50 percent cost savings with an industry leading 75 percent completion rate. Today’s features an interview with Bank of Oklahoma’s Chris Maloney on what’s driving strong performance in the Agency MBS market, the outlook for refinancing and home prices, and how Fed rate cuts are shaping lending conditions and future risks.)

Light Calendar; Afternoon in Focus

While there are a smattering of Fed speakers on the calendar today, the morning comments are not likely to have an impact. In fact, the average Fed speech is a forgettable event these days as there are only so many ways to say “inflation is still higher than we want, but we’re feeling a bit more nervous about the labor market.” Other than that, it is only the 1pm 10yr Treasury auction and the 2pm Fed Minutes that have any potential relevance as far as calendar events are concerned. Bonds are off to a decent start and volatility has been light in the first hour and a half.