The easiest promise to make for 2015 has been that of volatility.  It's not the worst we've ever seen, but it continues at a healthy pace in terms of the size of day to day changes.  Where yesterday saw rates down big, today brought them up, bigger. 

Motivation continued to come from overseas with China and Greece being the key players at the moment.  The overnight session began poorly for Treasuries as Chinese stocks put in their first big bounce back since the faster-paced selling began.  No surprise there.  As we've discussed, the surprise would have been if the selling continued.

Greece may have been slightly more surprising today, depending on your point of view.  The surprise is that the timeline of events laid out after last weekend's referendum is proceeding according to schedule.  That means that Greece has delivered the agreed-upon proposal to its Eurozone creditors and is set to ratify the proposal in Greek parliament tomorrow. 

Of course the delivery of the proposal doesn't mean anything will happen.  And in fact, the details are already raising some questions among those who know about such things.  Still, the simple fact that 4 days have passed without any new delays or major changes in the gameplan is nothing short of astonishing in this saga.  It could indeed signal that the tone of the negotiations has changed in a more sober direction, but ultimately, the earliest we could know would be this weekend.

After Europe and China pushed bond markets into weaker territory, domestic events joined in the 'fun.'  Corporate bond issuance was big today, due to one large deal from Charter.  This creates additional supply pressure in a bond market that's already facing supply in the form of the afternoon's 30yr bond auction.  The charter deal didn't price until the afternoon, meaning that traders were eager to sell newly-acquired 30's after the auction in order to get in on the juicy yields being offered in the charter deal.  As such, yields continued to drift higher in the afternoon.


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
99-22 : -0-24
FNMA 3.5
103-00 : -0-20
FNMA 4.0
105-28 : -0-14
Treasuries
2 YR
0.5850 : +0.0360
10 YR
2.3170 : +0.1190
30 YR
3.1160 : +0.1370
Pricing as of 7/9/15 6:50PMEST

Today's Reprice Alerts and Updates
A recap of Alerts and Updates provided to MBS Live subscribers.
3:32PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: If You Haven't Seen a Reprice Yet, You Probably Will
1:04PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Negative Reprice Risk Increases Further After Auction Flops
12:59PM  :  ALERT ISSUED: Negative Reprice Risk Increasing Ahead of Auction
10:21AM  :  Global Risk Aversion Waning; Corp Issuance Waxing; Bonds Suffer

MBS Live Chat Highlights
A recap of featured comments from the Live Discussion on the MBS Live Dashboard.
Scott Lushing  :  "many lenders have encompass set up so the LC doesnt affect APR"
Dustin McAlister  :  "Where is that LC being applied though that would force the APR lower. "
Sung Kim  :  "when the lender credit exceeds the APR charges - theoretically"
Dustin McAlister  :  "am i missing something obvious here....BOA is quoting a 30 year fixed with an APR lower than the rate on Zillow....when is this ever mathematically possible?"
Andy Pada, Jr.  :  "that doesn't make sense; what if a loan set to close on 8/31 gets pushed to 9/1 because the closing agent can't close? Does the borrower get charged the increased llpas? does the originator get paid less, no because of Dodd-Frank. How does the rescission period affect the cutoff date. Too many variables and issues."
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. 29-YEAR 10-MONTH BOND BID-TO-COVER RATIO 2.23, NON-COMP BIDS $9.87 MLN"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. SELLS $13 BLN 29-YEAR 10-MONTH BONDS AT HIGH YIELD 3.084 PCT, AWARDS 49.67 PCT OF BIDS AT HIGH"
Matthew Graham  :  "average bid-to-cover has been 2.34 and indirect bidders have taken 51%"
Matthew Graham  :  "30yr WI (target yield for the auction) is at 3.071 currently "