MBS Live: MBS Morning Market Summary
Bond markets opened up moderately weaker and moved to what could be considered significantly weaker territory in the first hour of the domestic session.  It was about a 10bp move from yesterday's close in 10yr yields (1.57 to 1.67).  But everything has been moderating since then, buoyed by a healthy recovery in European benchmark debt (10bps lower since 3am), technical support levels, an absence of any disconcerting domestic economic data, and some measure of general bid-side support due to month-end/quarter-end.  Beyond all of the above, MBS have outperformed anyway, losing less ground into the weaker territory earlier this morning.  Everything here is pretty consistent with 2 big components of our default outlook: first, that the recently consolidating trends in bond markets seem to be resolving into a new sideways pattern instead of releasing stored energy and secondly, that MBS are as able as ever to hold their ground in the face of Treasury weakness, especially if that weakness remains range-bound.
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
105-06 : -0-04
FNMA 4.0
106-15 : -0-03
FNMA 4.5
107-10 : -0-02
FNMA 5.0
108-08 : -0-01
GNMA 3.5
107-01 : -0-03
GNMA 4.0
109-09 : -0-03
GNMA 4.5
109-12 : -0-04
GNMA 5.0
110-01 : -0-02
FHLMC 3.5
104-31 : -0-04
FHLMC 4.0
106-05 : -0-04
FHLMC 4.5
106-27 : -0-02
FHLMC 5.0
107-16 : -0-01
Pricing as of 11:06 AM EST
Morning 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 morning.

10:51AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Bond Markets Get A Boost From European Benchmarks
One of the most interesting developments following the EU news overnight was that 10yr European benchmark yields rose above US 10yr Treasury yields for the first time since February. More so than the Euro or the Stock lever or even just the general "risk-on" trade, US Treasuries mirror and match German Bunds (European Benchmark). So there was quite a bit of pressure for 10's to re-test the ceiling of supportive levels in the high 1.6's. as Bunds themselves hit the high 1.6's.

But thus far, domestic bond markets have done an admirable job of holding their ground vs the general currents of the "risk-on" trade. And now that Bunds are easing lower from their late European session highs, US Treasuries have backed down from their highs of the morning as well--all this despite advancing stocks and Euros.

MBS generally approve of the ground-holding and are very close to regaining the lower levels of yesterday's range. Bottom line for now is that 102-13 to 102-14 has been supportive all week in Fannie 3.0s, getting attention on Tuesday, Wednesday, and again this morning. Just like 10yr Treasuries are contending with an intermediate pivot point around 1.645 before going lower, so too are Fannie 3.0's contending with their overhead pivot at 102-22.

Both of these are somewhat blurry lines in the sand that will help us assess any ongoing positivity. "Blurry" because there's no good specific level to assign to either pivot point. For 3.0's, it's more like 102-22 to 102-24 and for 10's 1.64 to 1.65. Anything INSIDE those ranges is positive, but equivocally so.

A break through to stronger territory would be significantly more positive whereas a firm show of resistance would be the first warning sign of further weakness, but that weakness would need to be confirmed by follow-through selling that takes Fannie 3.0's through 102-13 and 10yr Treasury yields above 1.69 before we'd be too concerned that the "new sideways" range is at risk. Otherwise, every passing minute is confirming the "new sideways."

10yr yields are currently down to an impressive 1.6483 and Fannie 3.0's back up to 102-21. Very good, even if not great, all things considered.
10:06AM  :  ECON: Consumer Sentiment Slightly Lower Than Expected
- Headline Sentiment 73.2 vs 74.1 consensus
- 'current conditions' 81.5 vs 82.1 consensus
- 'consumer expectations' 67.8 vs 69.0 consensus
- 12 month outlook 79 vs 82 consensus
- 1-yr inflation expectations 3.1% vs 3.0 consensus
- 5-yr inflation expectations 2.8% vs 2.9 consensus
- sentiment, conditions, expectations lowest since December

(Reuters) - Consumer sentiment dropped to a six-month low in June as Americans' view of the economy soured, a survey released on Friday showed. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan's final reading on the overall index on consumer sentiment fell to 73.2 in June from 79.3 in May.

It was the lowest level since December and fell short of economists' expectations for the index to hold at the same level as June's preliminary reading of 74.1.

The deterioration in consumers' attitudes came mostly from households with incomes over $75,000; sentiment among lower-income households was little changed, the survey said. "While the overall level of consumer sentiment is substantially above last summer's low - which would normally indicate a growth slowdown, not a downturn - the buying plans of upper-income households have also sharply declined," survey director Richard Curtin said in a statement.

"Since these households account for a large share of total spending, if the declines continue in the months ahead, it could have a substantial impact on total spending."
9:57AM  :  ECON: Chicago Purchasing Managers Index Roughly As-Expected
* 52.9 Headline vs 52.5 consensus and 52.7 last month... not the sort of deviations that will inspire bond markets much this AM...

From ISM-Chicago:

The Chicago Purchasing Managers reported the June Chicago Business Barometer stabilized just above May's 33 month low. The short-term trend of the Chicago Business Barometer fell for the third month. The three-month moving average of each Business Activity index, except Employment, fell in June. Prices Paid were at a 30 month low. New Orders and Order Backlogs were at their lowest since September 2009.
9:06AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Bond Markets Weaker On EU Debt Deal, Trying To Establish Support
Bond markets continue to trade in weaker territory after this morning's first round of domestic economic data proved to be of little interest compared to overnight events. The key market mover so far today is the agreement reached at the EU Summit (after much wailing and gnashing of teeth from Spain and Italy) that will allow Europe's permanent bailout fund, the ESM, to recapitalize banks without increasing a country's budget deficit and without taking preferential status over the country's other bondholders.

The Euro shot sharply higher following the announcement in the wee hours of the morning and everything else has followed in a "risk-on" direction. 10yr yields have seen their sharpest upward movement since the Greek elections and S&P futures are close to 25 pts higher.

MBS are outpeforming noticeably with Fannie 3.5s down only 10 ticks on the day at 105-00, a familiar support level of late and Fannie 3.0's are down 13 ticks at 102-15, roughly in line with Wednesday's lows. 10yr yields currently trade in the mid 1.67's which marks the beginning of some critical "line in the sand" territory that stretches up to 1.69.

Current trading movements are less about "stuff" that's happening right now and more about sorting out the reaction to the overnight news, as well as simply letting the technical and flow-based trading considerations run their course. If bond markets are able to dig in and hold ground at current levels, it would be a profound statement reinforcing the "new sideways" range from 1.68 to 1.56 (plus or minus a bp on either side).
8:36AM  :  ECON: Incomes And Outlays Both In Line With Expectations
* Both Incomes and Outlays as expected. No real surprises in the report. Markets continue to be more interested in Europe.

From the BEA:

Personal income increased $25.4 billion, or 0.2 percent, and disposable personal income (DPI) increased $18.5 billion, or 0.2 percent, in May, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) decreased $4.7 billion, or less than 0.1 percent. In April, personal income increased $29.4 billion, or 0.2 percent, DPI increased $19.5 billion, or 0.2 percent, and PCE increased $16.2 billion, or 0.1 percent, based on revised estimates.

Real disposable income increased 0.3 percent in May, compared with an increase of 0.1 percent in April. Real PCE increased 0.1 percent in May, the same increase as in April.
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.

BVG  :  "try Advancial CU Blair"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- THOMSON REUTERS/U. OF MICH US CONSUMER SENTIMENT FINAL JUNE 73.2 (CONSENSUS 74.1) VS PRELIMINARY JUNE 74.1 "
Blair  :  "Anyone have any non warrantable lenders at 90 ltv"
Andrew Horowitz  :  "It seems like it is a step in the right direction, the problem is that they still have months of work to do to put these steps into place. With their economies all falling into recessionary levels it will put more pressure on the governments to pay their way out of their mess right now"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - CHICAGO PURCHASING MANAGEMENT INDEX 52.9 IN JUNE (CONSENSUS 52.5) VS 52.7 IN MAY "
Adam Quinones  :  "impressive performance MBS!"
Adam Quinones  :  "wow...basis about 7 tighter vs. rates even with about 1bn in TBA supply this AM."
Matthew Graham  :  "There's some "turning point" / "game changer" type buzz over this one, but markets seem to disagree, otherwise they'd be much less interested in respecting recent support levels. For my party, I couldn't really say for sure Jeff, but still leaning toward can-kicking at this point. I guess the biggest question is whether or not the overall "situation" can even be adequately treated by the existing system. Some say EU has the resources to fix itself, some don't. If you're in the former camp, t"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - MERKEL COALITION PARL'T LEADER SAYS VOTE ON ESM,. FISCAL PACT TO TAKE PLACE ON FRIDAY AS SCHEDULED "
Jeff Anderson  :  "Gm, all from finally sunny Fl. So basically the can got kicked again and Spain became Grease 2. And they'll let us know when they need some more money? Oh, and they don't have to tighten up anything for now. So they'll be fine. "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - BULLARD - FED COULD REOPEN CRISIS-ERA LIQUIDITY FACILITIES IN EVENT OF A SHOCK "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- FED'S BULLARD - MONETARY POLICY IS APPROPRIATELY CALIBRATED TO CURRENT SITUATION "
Andy Pada  :  "personal saving rate is sort of a double edge sword"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - US MAY PERSONAL SAVING RATE 3.9 PCT VS APRIL 3.7 PCT "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- US MAY OVERALL PCE PRICE INDEX -0.2 PCT (-0.1858), LARGEST DECLINE SINCE JUNE 2010, VS APRIL 0.0 PCT (PREV 0.0 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - US MAY PERSONAL INCOME +0.2 PCT (CONS +0.2 PCT) VS APRIL +0.2 PCT (PREV +0.2 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - US MAY PERSONAL SPENDING 0.0 PCT (CONSENSUS 0.0 PCT) VS APRIL +0.1 PCT (PREV +0.3 PCT) "
Victor Burek  :  "sure..risk on"
Andy Pada  :  "agreed, but is this morning's Treasury weakness a result of EU action?"
Victor Burek  :  "nothing solved over there"
Andy Pada  :  "VB, is that in response to EU?"
Victor Burek  :  "dont worry about the ugly start Oliver..it is only temporary"
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "Ugly start this morning"

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