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You are viewing Micro News from Wednesday, Jan 30, 2013 - View all recent Micro News
  • 1/30/13
    While a few lenders have already repriced positively...
    MBS Updates are a service provided to MBS Live! subscribers only.
    Learn More | Start a Free Trial | View MBS Prices
    Category: MBS, alert
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    FHA TAKES ADDITIONAL STEPS TO BOLSTER CAPITAL RESERVES
    As part of a broad effort to strengthen the Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), FHA Commissioner Carol Galante announced a series of changes to be issued this week that will allow the agency to better manage risk and further strengthen the health of the MMI Fund.

    “These are essential and appropriate measures to manage and protect FHA’s single-family insurance programs” said Galante. “In addition to protecting the MMI Fund, these changes will encourage the return of private capital to the housing market, and make sure FHA remains a vital source of affordable and sustainable mortgage financing for future generations of American homebuyers.”

    (Includes Changes to MIPs, HECM, Underwriting , Down Payments on Loans over $625k, and advertising regarding post-foreclosure qualification)
    Category: MBS, INDUSTRY
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    A surprisingly muted response so far to the FOMC Announcement...
    MBS Updates are a service provided to MBS Live! subscribers only.
    Learn More | Start a Free Trial | View MBS Prices
    Category: MBS, alert
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    All Quiet Ahead Of FOMC. Big Potential Energy
    5 minutes to go until the FOMC Announcement and we're already in line with the highest volume session of January. Prices have been relatively steady after shaking of the morning weakness at 11am. Fannie 3.0s have traded back and forth around 103-01 and 10yr yields have ground into a ceiling at 2.03 (2.028 currently).

    There's never a guarantee that FOMC Announcements will be huge market movers in one direction or another, but there's always the POTENTIAL. There's a chance the statement won't be much changed from previous statements, but if there are notable differences, and if they speak to the timing/continuation of easing either positively or negatively, even the looming NFP on Friday won't prevent big, fast swings.

    Lenders know this and will be quicker to reprice if we start tanking. If that's the case, we'll endeavor, as always to get the alert out as quickly as possible, but these are also good times to be paying attention to prices as well, watching for any sort of sustained break below 102-28 in 3.0s and/or above 2.04-ish in 10yr yields. If things happen to break the other way, enjoy the ride.
    Category: MBS, UPDATE
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    Leaking Back To Weaker Levels After Morning Volatility
    Bond markets began the overnight session in moderately weaker territory as Asia traded generally "risk-on" (higher stocks, weaker yen, higher bond yields). Strong data in the UK and sell-biased tradeflows from central banks contributed to an extension of the weakness in the European hours.

    The latter saw 10yr yields rise to 2.035 just after 3:30am. From there, some of the weakness ebbed into the domestic session and equities futures supported the notion of "pausing" the overnight "risk-on" moves. MBS came in the door a few ticks weaker than yesterday's close.

    ADP Payrolls were better than expected and provided the first dose of volatility in the domestic session, taking Fannie 3.0s briefly below 103 for the first time since August. All told, it was a mere hiccup for broader bond markets, which digested the data fairly well. 10's rose by not even half a bp before turning around and waiting for GDP.

    After GDP printed a surprise -0.1, volume spiked and yields zipped a quick 3 bps lower. Everything was "risk-off" for 2 minutes or so, before stocks and bond yields bounced back higher. Stocks went sideways until the opening bell, shot to the highs of the morning 20 minutes later, and have since been selling off mildly with the S&P down 5 points from the highs.

    Bond markets are having none of it, however... 10'd disconnected from the stock lever CONVINCINGLY at 9:08am, rose to 2.02, and have traded within a bp of that ever since. MBS consequently moved back into their "fear of duration" stance and Fannie 3.0s are back at their lows of the morning (102-31+ at the moment).

    Is the disconnection and the weakness simply a defensive stance heading into this afternoon's FOMC? Probably... Not much going on until then, save for the 1pm 7yr Note Auction, but that's almost not worth mentioning in light of 2:15pm FOMC. Keep in mind, there's no press conference with today's release, so extra volatility is possible as the statement remains open to interpretation without clarification from Bernanke and framing by the member forecasts.
    Category: MBS, UPDATE
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    ECON: Q4 Advance GDP Falls 0.1 Percent, Much Weaker Than Expected
    - GDP -0.1 pct vs +1.1 Consensus
    - Deflator +0.6 vs +1.5 Consensus
    - PCE Price Index +1.2 vs +1.7 Consensus
    - Exports -5.7, first drop since Q109
    - Business Inventory changes account for 1.27 of drop
    - Headline GDP, first decline since Q209

    Real gross domestic product -- the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States -- decreased at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 (that is, from the third quarter to the fourth quarter), according to the "advance" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter, real GDP increased 3.1 percent.

    The Bureau emphasized that the fourth-quarter advance estimate released today is based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency (see the box on page 4 and the "Comparisons of Revisions to GDP" on page 5). The "second" estimate for the fourth quarter, based on more complete data, will be released on February 28, 2013.

    The decrease in real GDP in the fourth quarter primarily reflected negative contributions from private inventory investment, federal government spending, and exports that were partly offset by positive contributions from personal consumption expenditures (PCE), nonresidential fixed investment, and residential fixed investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased.
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    ECON: ADP Private Payrolls Stronger Than Expected
    - Payrolls 192k vs 165k Consensus
    - December Revised to 185k From 215k
    - Market Reaction: Initially, bond markets extended morning weakness, but have since pulled back to their best levels of the domestic session (which are still slightly weaker than Tuesday's closing levels).

    Private sector employment increased by 192,000 jobs from December to January, according to the January ADP National Employment Report, which is produced by ADP, a leading provider of human capital management services, in collaboration with Moody’s Analytics. The report, which is derived from ADP’s actual payroll data, measures the change in total nonfarm private employment each month on a seasonally adjusted basis. The December 2012 report, which reported job gains of 215,000, was revised downward by 30,000 to 185,000 jobs.

    "U.S. private sector employment got off to a good start in 2013, as 192,000 jobs were added during the month of January," noted Carlos A. Rodriguez, president and chief executive officer of ADP. "According to the ADP National Employment Report, private sector employers created an average of 183,000 new jobs per month during the last three months. This is an encouraging sign of steady improvement in the job market."

    Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “The job market is slowly, but steadily, improving. Monthly job gains appear to have accelerated from near 150,000 to closer to 175,000. Construction is finally kicking into gear and more than offsetting the weakness in manufacturing. The recent gains may be overstating any improvement, particularly in the context of recent revivals in growth at the start of the past three years, but the gains are encouraging nonetheless.”
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    FHA TAKES ADDITIONAL STEPS TO BOLSTER CAPITAL RESERVES
    As part of a broad effort to strengthen the Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), FHA Commissioner Carol Galante announced a series of changes to be issued this week that will allow the agency to better manage risk and further strengthen the health of the MMI Fund.

    “These are essential and appropriate measures to manage and protect FHA’s single-family insurance programs” said Galante. “In addition to protecting the MMI Fund, these changes will encourage the return of private capital to the housing market, and make sure FHA remains a vital source of affordable and sustainable mortgage financing for future generations of American homebuyers.”

    (Includes Changes to MIPs, HECM, Underwriting , Down Payments on Loans over $625k, and advertising regarding post-foreclosure qualification)
    Category: MBS, INDUSTRY
    Share:   
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  • 1/30/13
    While a few lenders have already repriced positively...
    MBS Updates are a service provided to MBS Live! subscribers only.
    Learn More | Start a Free Trial | View MBS Prices
    Category: MBS, alert
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    As part of a broad effort to strengthen the Federal Housing Administration’s (FHA) Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), FHA Commissioner Carol Galante announced a series of changes to be issued this week that will allow the agency to better manage risk and further strengthen the health of the MMI Fund.

    “These are essential and appropriate measures to manage and protect FHA’s single-family insurance programs” said Galante. “In addition to protecting the MMI Fund, these changes will encourage the return of private capital to the housing market, and make sure FHA remains a vital source of affordable and sustainable mortgage financing for future generations of American homebuyers.”

    (Includes Changes to MIPs, HECM, Underwriting , Down Payments on Loans over $625k, and advertising regarding post-foreclosure qualification)
    Category: MBS, INDUSTRY
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    A surprisingly muted response so far to the FOMC Announcement...
    MBS Updates are a service provided to MBS Live! subscribers only.
    Learn More | Start a Free Trial | View MBS Prices
    Category: MBS, alert
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    5 minutes to go until the FOMC Announcement and we're already in line with the highest volume session of January. Prices have been relatively steady after shaking of the morning weakness at 11am. Fannie 3.0s have traded back and forth around 103-01 and 10yr yields have ground into a ceiling at 2.03 (2.028 currently).

    There's never a guarantee that FOMC Announcements will be huge market movers in one direction or another, but there's always the POTENTIAL. There's a chance the statement won't be much changed from previous statements, but if there are notable differences, and if they speak to the timing/continuation of easing either positively or negatively, even the looming NFP on Friday won't prevent big, fast swings.

    Lenders know this and will be quicker to reprice if we start tanking. If that's the case, we'll endeavor, as always to get the alert out as quickly as possible, but these are also good times to be paying attention to prices as well, watching for any sort of sustained break below 102-28 in 3.0s and/or above 2.04-ish in 10yr yields. If things happen to break the other way, enjoy the ride.
    Category: MBS, UPDATE
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    Bond markets began the overnight session in moderately weaker territory as Asia traded generally "risk-on" (higher stocks, weaker yen, higher bond yields). Strong data in the UK and sell-biased tradeflows from central banks contributed to an extension of the weakness in the European hours.

    The latter saw 10yr yields rise to 2.035 just after 3:30am. From there, some of the weakness ebbed into the domestic session and equities futures supported the notion of "pausing" the overnight "risk-on" moves. MBS came in the door a few ticks weaker than yesterday's close.

    ADP Payrolls were better than expected and provided the first dose of volatility in the domestic session, taking Fannie 3.0s briefly below 103 for the first time since August. All told, it was a mere hiccup for broader bond markets, which digested the data fairly well. 10's rose by not even half a bp before turning around and waiting for GDP.

    After GDP printed a surprise -0.1, volume spiked and yields zipped a quick 3 bps lower. Everything was "risk-off" for 2 minutes or so, before stocks and bond yields bounced back higher. Stocks went sideways until the opening bell, shot to the highs of the morning 20 minutes later, and have since been selling off mildly with the S&P down 5 points from the highs.

    Bond markets are having none of it, however... 10'd disconnected from the stock lever CONVINCINGLY at 9:08am, rose to 2.02, and have traded within a bp of that ever since. MBS consequently moved back into their "fear of duration" stance and Fannie 3.0s are back at their lows of the morning (102-31+ at the moment).

    Is the disconnection and the weakness simply a defensive stance heading into this afternoon's FOMC? Probably... Not much going on until then, save for the 1pm 7yr Note Auction, but that's almost not worth mentioning in light of 2:15pm FOMC. Keep in mind, there's no press conference with today's release, so extra volatility is possible as the statement remains open to interpretation without clarification from Bernanke and framing by the member forecasts.
    Category: MBS, UPDATE
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    - GDP -0.1 pct vs +1.1 Consensus
    - Deflator +0.6 vs +1.5 Consensus
    - PCE Price Index +1.2 vs +1.7 Consensus
    - Exports -5.7, first drop since Q109
    - Business Inventory changes account for 1.27 of drop
    - Headline GDP, first decline since Q209

    Real gross domestic product -- the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States -- decreased at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 (that is, from the third quarter to the fourth quarter), according to the "advance" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter, real GDP increased 3.1 percent.

    The Bureau emphasized that the fourth-quarter advance estimate released today is based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency (see the box on page 4 and the "Comparisons of Revisions to GDP" on page 5). The "second" estimate for the fourth quarter, based on more complete data, will be released on February 28, 2013.

    The decrease in real GDP in the fourth quarter primarily reflected negative contributions from private inventory investment, federal government spending, and exports that were partly offset by positive contributions from personal consumption expenditures (PCE), nonresidential fixed investment, and residential fixed investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased.
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    - Payrolls 192k vs 165k Consensus
    - December Revised to 185k From 215k
    - Market Reaction: Initially, bond markets extended morning weakness, but have since pulled back to their best levels of the domestic session (which are still slightly weaker than Tuesday's closing levels).

    Private sector employment increased by 192,000 jobs from December to January, according to the January ADP National Employment Report, which is produced by ADP, a leading provider of human capital management services, in collaboration with Moody’s Analytics. The report, which is derived from ADP’s actual payroll data, measures the change in total nonfarm private employment each month on a seasonally adjusted basis. The December 2012 report, which reported job gains of 215,000, was revised downward by 30,000 to 185,000 jobs.

    "U.S. private sector employment got off to a good start in 2013, as 192,000 jobs were added during the month of January," noted Carlos A. Rodriguez, president and chief executive officer of ADP. "According to the ADP National Employment Report, private sector employers created an average of 183,000 new jobs per month during the last three months. This is an encouraging sign of steady improvement in the job market."

    Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “The job market is slowly, but steadily, improving. Monthly job gains appear to have accelerated from near 150,000 to closer to 175,000. Construction is finally kicking into gear and more than offsetting the weakness in manufacturing. The recent gains may be overstating any improvement, particularly in the context of recent revivals in growth at the start of the past three years, but the gains are encouraging nonetheless.”
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    ECON: Q4 Advance GDP Falls 0.1 Percent, Much Weaker Than Expected
    - GDP -0.1 pct vs +1.1 Consensus
    - Deflator +0.6 vs +1.5 Consensus
    - PCE Price Index +1.2 vs +1.7 Consensus
    - Exports -5.7, first drop since Q109
    - Business Inventory changes account for 1.27 of drop
    - Headline GDP, first decline since Q209

    Real gross domestic product -- the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States -- decreased at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 (that is, from the third quarter to the fourth quarter), according to the "advance" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter, real GDP increased 3.1 percent.

    The Bureau emphasized that the fourth-quarter advance estimate released today is based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency (see the box on page 4 and the "Comparisons of Revisions to GDP" on page 5). The "second" estimate for the fourth quarter, based on more complete data, will be released on February 28, 2013.

    The decrease in real GDP in the fourth quarter primarily reflected negative contributions from private inventory investment, federal government spending, and exports that were partly offset by positive contributions from personal consumption expenditures (PCE), nonresidential fixed investment, and residential fixed investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased.
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
  • 1/30/13
    ECON: ADP Private Payrolls Stronger Than Expected
    - Payrolls 192k vs 165k Consensus
    - December Revised to 185k From 215k
    - Market Reaction: Initially, bond markets extended morning weakness, but have since pulled back to their best levels of the domestic session (which are still slightly weaker than Tuesday's closing levels).

    Private sector employment increased by 192,000 jobs from December to January, according to the January ADP National Employment Report, which is produced by ADP, a leading provider of human capital management services, in collaboration with Moody’s Analytics. The report, which is derived from ADP’s actual payroll data, measures the change in total nonfarm private employment each month on a seasonally adjusted basis. The December 2012 report, which reported job gains of 215,000, was revised downward by 30,000 to 185,000 jobs.

    "U.S. private sector employment got off to a good start in 2013, as 192,000 jobs were added during the month of January," noted Carlos A. Rodriguez, president and chief executive officer of ADP. "According to the ADP National Employment Report, private sector employers created an average of 183,000 new jobs per month during the last three months. This is an encouraging sign of steady improvement in the job market."

    Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “The job market is slowly, but steadily, improving. Monthly job gains appear to have accelerated from near 150,000 to closer to 175,000. Construction is finally kicking into gear and more than offsetting the weakness in manufacturing. The recent gains may be overstating any improvement, particularly in the context of recent revivals in growth at the start of the past three years, but the gains are encouraging nonetheless.”
    Category: MBS, ECON
    Share:   
 
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