MBS Live: MBS Afternoon Market Summary
Flat, flavorless, and boring all day long...  Today's only action occurred in the overnight session where easing concerns about the peripheral debt situation combined with some concessionary selling ahead of today's 10yr Note Auction to push yields 4-5 bps higher in 10yr Treasuries.  MBS opened slightly weaker as a result, and both sides of the market stayed very close to opening levels all day long.  Neither the morning's or afternoon's economic events and Fed Speakers had much of an effect.  Bottom line, we're at the exact same levels as 8:05am in both production MBS and Treasuries.  
MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
FNMA 3.5
103-09 : -0-05
FNMA 4.0
105-11 : -0-03
FNMA 4.5
106-27 : -0-01
FNMA 5.0
108-15 : +0-02
GNMA 3.5
104-25 : -0-05
GNMA 4.0
107-26 : -0-03
GNMA 4.5
109-10 : -0-01
GNMA 5.0
110-30 : +0-03
FHLMC 3.5
103-01 : -0-06
FHLMC 4.0
105-01 : -0-04
FHLMC 4.5
106-13 : -0-03
FHLMC 5.0
107-31 : +0-01
Pricing as of 4:07 PM EST
Afternoon Reprice Alerts and Updates
Below is a recap of instant Reprice Alerts and updates issued via email and text alert to MBS Live subscribers this afternoon.

2:43PM  :  ECON: Rising Energy Cost Concerns Reflected in Beige Book
There was precious little information in today's Beige Book release that constitutes "news." Indeed, markets have scarcely reacted. There are a few things to simply make note of, before moving on to tomorrow and beyond.

First, there's logically been an increase in the certain components of the report that cite rising fuel costs as potential impediments to growth and/or spending on the near term horizon. Both producers and consumers were cited as feeling the pinch, with manufacturing, transportation, and discretionary income potentially affected. Also slightly bearish for stocks is the mention that the unusually warm weather positively affected recent retail spending.

Slightly less on the radar were "frequent reports" among employers of difficulty finding qualified workers. Then again, it was on some radar... This is from late 2010:

" businesses are replacing more and more low-skilled labor with investments in technology. This affirms the idea that low skilled labor will face extra sticky hourly wages and find less incentive to seek out work" - read more...

Full Beige Book Link:
2:27PM  :  ECON: Budget Gap Widens, Chalked Up to Accounting Change
* March budget gap $198.16 bln vs March 2011 $188.15 bln
* First half of 2012 $779 bln vs H1 of 2011: $829.4 bln
* Treasury says $30 bln in benefits pmnts shifted from Apr to Mar
* Treasury says TARP and educational subsidies added $20 bln
* Gov spending down to $369.4 bln vs $339.0 bln in March 2011

Full Release:
1:23PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Supportive Bounce Back Materializing... Positive Shift in Risk
MBS managed to hold on to 103-06 support despite one brief move lower. 10yr yields now look to have put in support in the mid 2.04's.

Fannie 3.5's are down only 5 ticks on the day now at 103-09 and near their highs of the day (103-11). 10yr yields are down to 2.0298. Trading is active and 2-way at the moment, but favoring bond bulls for now. Positive reprice risk slightly outweighs negative now.
1:06PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Caution! First Move is Weaker Following Auction
That's all we know so far... The auction itself wasn't horrible with a high yield in line with 1pm WI and a 3.08 Bid-to-cover, a roughly average result. But Treasuries initial move was higher in yield and MBS quickly fell to the lows of the morning at 103-05, though they've since bounced to 103-07.

We'd be surprised to see weakness spiral out of control after such an auction, but some lenders might be spooked if things don't bounce right back. Watching mid 2.04's for support and 103-06 in MBS. If prices are below 103-06 for more than a minute or two, reprice risk is increasing.
12:41PM  :  10yr Auction Preview
Today's 10yr Auction is the 2nd reopening of the February 8th refunding (cycle: 1 refundings, 2 reopenings). So far, all the reopenings of the 2.00% coupon (which has been in effect since 11/8/11) have stopped through at lower than expected yields. But that has only been 3 reopenings.

Furthermore, the last refunding was strong as well, which does a little to refute the the idea of differentiating too much between refundings and reopenings. So we don't want to get too deep into trying to predict whether or not we'll see yields come in higher or lower than 1pm WI.

The more objective differentiation is between the Bid-to-cover ratios of the two types of auctions. Reopenings, like today, tend to have higher bid-to-covers, with an average of 3.19 since the fateful FOMC Announcement in August 2011. Refundings have averaged 2.97 over the same time.

In other words, if the bid-to-cover isn't OVER 3.0, that's relatively weaker demand than recent history suggests and would need to be accompanied by a decently sized stop-through (actual high yield coming in lower than 1pm when-issued yield) in order to suggest a favorable result.
11:00AM  :  Slow Morning in Terms of Price Action, But Decent Volume
With no scheduled Fed Twist buying to support Treasuries, plus the need to accommodate today's 10yr Auction ($21 bln), some measure of weakness was to be expected. But the Weakness has been far from alarming with 10's merely creeping up into the 2.03's for the most part, whereas we see the more serious pivot zone beginning in the mid 2.06's.

It's pretty scary territory above 2.06 as we don't really have much by way of recent yield movement between there and 2.14 (though there's plenty of 2.06-2.09 from early March).

10's have been inching higher inside a fairly regular trend channel but are currently testing the LOWER side of that channel. It would be a bit of a surprise to see further rallying develop 2 hours before the auction. In fact, we'd rather NOT see any acceleration to the downside in yields as it could make the auction tougher.

MBS, for their part, seem content to go mostly sideways this morning, slightly outperforming Treasuries. Fannie 3.5's are currently down 6 ticks from yesterday's post-roll close of 103-14 to 103-08, and haven't deviated from those levels by more than 2 ticks. Things are VERY calm in in terms of price action, though volume is heavy and fairly well balanced.
Live Chat Featured Comments
A recap of the featured comments from the MBS Live Dashboard's Live Chat feature, utilized by hundreds of industry professionals each day.

Ken Crute  :  "$5k to current principal JY "
Matt Hodges  :  "that sounds accurate, jyork"
Jason York  :  "on an open access, the new loan amount can only be $5000 more then the current principle balance, not principle plus interest, correct?"
Adam Quinones  :  "...cause it's all about productivity and keeping costs down."
Adam Quinones  :  "must be trained to control the robots!"
Adam Quinones  :  "i hope...gonna be a gap while we play catch-up."
Brent Borcherding  :  "Or shift the culture of about 10-15% of the population...I think most of the culture has shifted."
Adam Quinones  :  "gotta work hard to get ahead!"
Adam Quinones  :  "people want things handed to them..."
Adam Quinones  :  "we need a culture shift"
Jeff Statz  :  "carrot in the eye and stick as discipline"
Andy Pada  :  "don't know the right combination of the carrot or the stick to accomplish this"
Andy Pada  :  "for me it is about employers keeping jobs in the United States "
Andy Pada  :  "I think the skill set issue is partly a red herring in the labor/employment debate"
Andy Pada  :  "as does the homeowner"
John Rodgers  :  "becasue the have the "right" to do it."
Andy Pada  :  "and there you have it."
Matthew Graham  :  "because the "shark tank" says that's OK"
Andy Pada  :  "why don't we have the same disdain for corporations making the "un-American" but economic decision to send jobs overseas "
Andy Pada  :  "the other day we derided the ethical abyss of the strategic defaulter, despite the economic rationality behind it"
Brent Borcherding  :  "If your father's father built something for a career and you do the same...you didn't move upward."
Matt Hodges  :  "and/or allow more foreign workers into the US to work here, pay taxes here, instead of the companies going offshore"
Matt Hodges  :  "indeed - if our country can't see the gap in skill set, we will continue to slide"
Matthew Graham  :  "Not much surprising in the Beige Book. Somewhat interesting though: RTRS - FED SAYS HIRING STEADY OR SLIGHTLY STRONGER IN MOST DISTRICTS, FREQUENT REPORTS OF DIFFICULTY FINDING QUALIFIED WORKERS "
Matt Hodges  :  "check lender overlays"
John Rodgers  :  "good to know"
Matt Hodges  :  "i'm doing one to $417000 on a free and clear"
John Rodgers  :  "Got a borrower that wants 200k cash out, are there any restrictions on amount of cash out?"
Matt Hodges  :  "i have one that started drawing when he hit 70 1/2 in January"
Roger Moore  :  "8k per month. waited a few months and the loan wen through"
Roger Moore  :  "i recently had a borrower start taking a fixed draw from IRA"
Michael Mitchell  :  "Yes Rob, Works very well"
Rob Ellis  :  "Have a customer with tons of reserves but very little income, I worked around this in the past by having customer setup annuity 3+ years for verifiable income...any of you try this strategy out lately"
Matthew Graham  :  "looks like we might be confirming a supportive bounce. Strong bid-side support in MBS over the past 5 minutes"
Matthew Graham  :  ""B" ish.."
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - U.S. 9-YR 10-MO NOTES BID-TO-COVER RATIO 3.08, NON-COMP BIDS $8.78 MLN"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - U.S. SELLS $21 BLN 9-YR 10-MO NOTES AT HIGH YIELD 2.043 PCT, AWARDS 75.67 PCT OF BIDS AT HIGH"
Brent Borcherding  :  "Auction?"
Rob Clark  :  "REPRICE: 12:15 PM - Provident Funding Better"
Ethan Brizzi  :  "love that new worksheet"
Mike Drews  :  "well I hope you learned something"
Steve Chizmadia  :  "Just spent an hour filling in all of the properties from a borrowers schedule E (13 of them) on the new worksheet to determine I cannot qualify him for a new tenative purchase transaction"
Matt Hodges  :  "tom - pretty sure eligibility follows the primary borrower. Call your area Va center"
tom duff  :  "Question: I am doing a VA IRRRL and cannot figure this out. The home we are refinancing is now investment which is fine as long as we go IRRRL, the issue is the client who's eligabilty was used is not disabled through the VA, the other client is disabled, any idea if I can use the disabled VET's eligability to waive the funding fee? or am I stuck using the initial eligability? thanks and sorry if my question does not make sense...it's not the most straight forward scenario. "
Jason York  :  "however, most of the time it has been credit enhancements on the loan that have made it ineligible, especially if it was with Navy Fed Credit Union"
Jason York  :  "MH, I have had the same issue before, and called FNMA, and something wasn't reported correctly, so FNMA had to get it updated in their system, took them about 30 days"
Michael Francis  :  "FYI - "Credit Enhancements" in the land of a Fannie/Freddie pool is usually pool insurance, placed by the MI companies. That is likely why you got an ineligible...."
Ken Crute  :  ""credit enhancements" are what FNMA has told me "
Ira Selwin  :  "MH -if they took out pool insurance it might not be eligible"
Brent Borcherding  :  "Some pools just aren't eligible."

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