After briefly breaking above the 1.84% inflection point amid last week's ECB-related volatility, 10yr Treasury yields have been religiously leaning on it as a supportive ceiling.  In fact, they were leaning on that ceiling well before the breakout too--as early as Jan 16.  The foil on the other side of the trading range has been 1.75-1.76% which got it's third major bounce today as well, and second bounce in the past two days counting Monday's overnight session.

When the domestic interest rate benchmark bounces off key resistance levels and key supportive levels in the same day, and for two days in a row, we can safely conclude that bond markets are trading a range and waiting for the next major input.

Such "inputs" can be big events or simply an eventual overflow of pent-up trading momentum.  In cases where a Fed Announcement is on the near-term calendar, it makes good enough sense to lean on that as the input in question.  The only reason not to view that as an utter no-brainer would be that domestic data and monetary policy haven't been nearly the market movers that European events have been.  Even so, the Fed's rate hike outlook will always be a factor for financial markets, even if the implication for mortgage rates is indirect at best.

As for the nuts and bolts of the trading day, participation was sapped by the snow storm on the East Coast.  Buyers outnumbered sellers in the morning.  It could have just as easily gone the other way, but the weakness in equities markets may have provided insulation there.  By that same token, late strength in equities coincided with a bounce back to unchanged levels for bond markets.


MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
MBS
FNMA 3.0
102-19 : +0-01
FNMA 3.5
105-03 : +0-01
FNMA 4.0
106-24 : +0-00
Treasuries
2 YR
0.5150 : +0.0002
10 YR
1.8280 : +0.0000
30 YR
2.3990 : +0.0010
Pricing as of 1/27/15 4:45PMEST

Today's Reprice Alerts and Updates
A recap of Alerts and Updates provided to MBS Live subscribers.
2:24PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: More Pronounced Negative Reprice Risk as MBS hit Lows
12:48PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Negative Reprice Risk Slowly Increasing
9:53AM  :  Bond Markets Holding Solid Gains Amid Light Participation

MBS Live Chat Highlights
A recap of featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBS Live Dashboard.
Ira Selwin  :  "the lender always pays the .25. Most include it in the end price."
Michael Ullmann  :  "AP: the .25% is always built into pricing on a NY deal. Its on every rate sheet I lock at"
Andy Pada, Jr.  :  "cema or no cema, lender still owes the .25% mortgage tax"
Matthew Graham  :  "Watt says the G-Fee Change discussion is premature. "we don't know if we're going to change yet." "
John Paul Mulchay  :  "David-there are situations where you can reduce income rather than hit client with debt although I am uncertain with regards to alimony. "
Michael Ullmann  :  "DR: probably some random wholesale shop with poor rates. if you are going DU/LP and there is more than 10 months left you have to hit it as a debt"
David Rudnick  :  "guideline quest- aside from FHA, do you guys know anywhere you can back alimony out of base instead of using as a debt"