MBSonMND: MBS RECAP
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FNMA 3.5
96-20 : -0-04
FNMA 4.0
100-22 : -0-01
FNMA 4.5
103-26 : -0-01
FNMA 5.0
106-12 : +0-02
GNMA 3.5
97-29 : -0-04
GNMA 4.0
102-10 : -0-02
GNMA 4.5
105-21 : -0-02
GNMA 5.0
108-05 : +0-04
FHLMC 3.5
96-15 : -0-03
FHLMC 4.0
100-20 : -0-01
FHLMC 4.5
103-22 : -0-01
FHLMC 5.0
106-07 : +0-01
Pricing as of 3:58 PM EST
Afternoon Market Updates
A recap of MBS Market Updates provided by MND Analysts and streamed live to the MBSonMND Dashboard .
3:45PM  :  The Day Ahead: Existing Home Sales
The events calendar is once again thin tomorrow. We do however get an update on home sales data at 10AM. The pace of Existing Home Sales is set to decline in May after an unexpected 0.8% drop in April, which left the pace at its lowest since February. This decline is expected to be steeper: the consensus looks for a 6% downturn to an annualized pace of 4.75 million units. With sales already down nearly 13% from last year, a rebound isn't looking likely until June. The Pending Home Sales Index, which anticipates this index by looking at contracts that have been signed but not finalized, fell 11.6% in April. That alone implies a double-digit percentage drop in May, yet mortgage applications to buy homes were only 2% lower in May, implying a smaller sales decline, according to IHS Global Insight. "The wild card is how active investors were in the market during the month," they said. "Our projection is that existing home sales will drop about 6% in May to a 4.75 million rate, with investors playing a slightly larger role in May than in April." OTHER THAN THAT....Since restructuring government leadership positions largely failed to improve national sentiment surrounding new spending cuts, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is now seeking government approval to enact his own austerity plan through a "vote of confidence", which will be taken on Tuesday night in Greece. Failing to agree on tough spending cuts would lead market participants to believe the Greeks are not serious about making long-term concessions to pay back their debt. This would be seen as a negative influence on stocks and a positive influence on mortgage rates.
3:37PM  :  Market Awaits Directional Motivation. Headline Watching...
CURRENT GUIDANCE: There's a weird feeling in the air. Stocks are still teetering on a major technical breakdown and bonds smell fear but are waiting for new guidance to be offered. If stocks fail to mount a sustainable recovery rally in the near future, we could be looking at another leg lower in Best Execution mortgage rates. While this "feeling" ties together well with our long-term outlook, it's still speculative in nature and largely driven by headline news. We say that because the timing of such news headlines, positive or negative, is "at any moment". And until it the market is given new information, stocks are gonna put up a fight like they did today. This "scratching and clawing" in equities implies the potential for loan pricing volatility remains high. Remember, it was only last week when Best Execution Mortgage Rates were teetering on a shift higher because stocks had put together a decent intraday rally effort. We may have dodged a bullet, but we're not out of the woods yet. The past few days provide a perfect example of how quickly unfriendly fluctuations can occur in the mortgage market. Volatility is to be expected, whether it's directionally friendly volatility is "to be determined".
2:54PM  :  New Mortgage Rate Watch Post
12:22PM  :  Mortgage Exec to Serve 8 Years in TB&W Fraud Case
(Reuters) - A former bank executive who served as the go-between for Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp, which collapsed from a $2.9 billion fraud scheme, was sentenced on Friday to eight years in federal prison. Catherine Kissick, 50, who was the head of Colonial Bank's mortgage warehouse lending division, pleaded guilty in March to one count of conspiracy to commit bank, securities and wire fraud. She received the longest prison sentence so far related to the TBW investigation. Kissick was the primary contact point for TBW's chairman, Lee Farkas, and helped devise plans that enabled the mortgage institution to sell loans that did not exist or had already been sold to other banks or investors. Colonial Bank ended up advancing money to TBW for the loans. They came up with the scheme to help address constant overdrafts by TBW which resulted from massive losses by the firm, according to prosecutors. While Kissick knew that their actions were fraudulent, she testified they continued out of fear that it would be detected. However, she sought to secure additional collateral from TBW in a bid to minimize the bank's exposure, prosecutors said. "She was fully aware that her actions were fraudulent and she worked closely with Farkas in carrying out the fraud scheme," prosecutors said in their sentencing recommendation to District Judge Leonie Brinkema. She had faced up to 30 years in prison. Prosecutors had recommended that she be sentenced to 11 years in prison. Also sentenced was one of Kissick's assistants, Teresa Kelly, who worked at Colonial Bank as an operations supervisor and processed many of the transactions of fake mortgage sales. She was sentenced to three months in prison, followed by nine months of house arrest.
11:57AM  :  ALERT: Negative Reprices Possible as MBS Fall in Slow Market
Trading activity is creeping along at a sluggish pace on this summer Monday morning. With fewer market participants in action, liquidity is lacking and price volatility is high as buyers and sellers search for willing counterparties. Production MBS coupon prices are currently being pressured lower by continued improvements in the equity market. The Fannie Mae 4.0 is now -5/32 at 100-17, which is 16/32 off the morning price high of 101-01. S&P futures have fully reversed overnight losses and are now +7.75 at 1273.75. That's a 17.50 point turnaround. The stock lever is clearly negatively influencing the bond market today. This is not a surprise given an empty econ calendar and thin trading volumes. Reprices for the worse are possible at current MBS indications. Wells Fargo seems to be the major lender that's most sensitive to recalls as their rate sheets were marginally improved this morning.
11:15AM  :  New MBS Commentary Post
Featured Market Discussion
A recap of the featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBSonMND Dashboard .
Adam Quinones  :  "that might move the needle."
Adam Quinones  :  "Greece has "vote of confidence" tomorrow night."
Jeff Anderson  :  "Sounds like all but a few are just chilling until 2:15pm Wednesday. Stored energy building?"
Adam Quinones  :  "ZZZZZzzzzzzzzz...sleepy market."
Bill Clark  :  "pf .125% better unchanged on the day "
Victor Burek  :  "nexbank worse"
John Rodgers  :  "but it's clearly not a rental."
John Rodgers  :  "I guess so they don't rent the guest home."
Jason York  :  "why would the utities matter?"
John Rodgers  :  "20% down and 35 back ratio"
John Rodgers  :  "Conv loan"
Jason York  :  "is their residual income amount really close to the guideline?"
John Rodgers  :  "we sent the apprasial to investor "
John Rodgers  :  "crazy!"
John Rodgers  :  "no like cap them off so they can't be used"
Jason York  :  "you mean to be included in their residual income?"
John Rodgers  :  "underwriter stipped me to cap utilites on a guest house?"
Adam Quinones  :  "yes that has been a key expectation today...lack of liquidity = whippy price action."
Tom Bartlett  :  "pf rp .125 worse. whipsaw time?"
MMNJ  :  "FHA = qualify at note rate so as long as you do not have a buydown you qualify at start rate"
Alan Craft  :  "Pretty sure FHA qual rate is start rate"
Jason York  :  "is it only conventional loans that will add 2% to the rate for qualification purposes on 3-5 yr ARMS, or will it do that for FHA and VA also?"
Jim Cheeley  :  "Suntrust worse"
Adam Quinones  :  "Wells is priced slightly better this AM. Id say they are a reprice threat."
Adam Quinones  :  "re: sudden price drop. the market is not well-attended today. because of that, leaving offers up on trading screens without any bids can lead to sudden drops."