Dot Plot in Focus With Fed’s “No Cut” Announcement

Dot Plot in Focus With Fed’s “No Cut” Announcement

Bonds lost some ground after this morning’s economic data, arguably in response to the Retail Sales control group beating its forecast.  Higher-than-expected import prices could also have played a supporting role, but the selling was too modest to worry about perfectly allocating the blame.  It was also erased by an afternoon rally that was best explained by general risk-off vibes surrounding geopolitical headlines.  Here too, we’re not seeing anything too compelling in terms of trading justification.  The best bet on that front would be Wednesday’s dot plot from the Fed (the chart showing each Fed member’s rate outlook over the next few years).  That will be released at 2pm with the “no cut” announcement.

Econ Data / Events

Retail Sales

-0.3 vs 0.1 f’cast, 0.0 prev

Core Retail Sales

0.4 vs 0.3 f’cast, -0.1 prev

Export Prices

-0.9 vs -0.7 f’cast, 0.1 prev

Import Prices

0.0 vs -0.2 f’cast, 0.1 prev

Market Movement Recap

09:09 AM Stronger overnight, flat after data, and losing some ground now.  MBS still an eighth higher on the day and 10yr down 3.5bps at 4.417

01:53 PM Best levels of the day now on Middle East newswires.  MBS up 5 ticks (.16) and 10yr down 6.5bps at 4.386

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Econ Data Not Weak Enough to Help

Bonds were decently stronger in the overnight session, but not for any new, specific reasons.  Trading levels have been cutting an increasingly narrow, sideways range.  Until that changes, a moderate rally following 2 days of weakness is the least surprising outcome. But that was before the AM data, which featured Retail Sales at -0.9 vs =0.8 f’cast.  One would think that’s worth more bond buying, but the control group (retail sales excluding autos/gas/building materials) rose to 0.4 vs 0.3 and had a small positive upward revision to last month. We’ve seen the control group set the tone on several occasions regardless of the headline.  With bonds losing some ground after the data, today seems like yet another example. 

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Mortgage Rates Drift Slightly Higher to Start The Week

While there’s been no shortage of political and geopolitical headlines over the past 2 business days, there hasn’t been much by way of inspiration for the bond market. Bonds (and, thus, rates) have moved nonetheless.   Perhaps it was the lower rates achieved last Thursday that prompted a pullback, or perhaps traders are pricing in some caution ahead of this week’s data and Fed announcement. Either way, bonds lost ground on Friday and again today–both times with little by way of overt justification. Fortunately, the losses have been modest.  They leave the average rate very much in the middle of its range over the past 2 months. And it wouldn’t be unfair to say rates have generally been sideways since last November in the bigger picture. Tomorrow’s Retail Sales data is capable of causing volatility in either direction, depending on the outcome.  Then on Wednesday, we’ll hear from the Fed.  While they will not be cutting rates at this meeting, they will be updating their rate outlook–something that frequently gets the market’s attention.