Learn. Share. Connect. (55,982 Members)  - Join
 

Site Tools

Join Now or Sign In
for Full Access to All Features

Recent Video

March 19 (Bloomberg) -- Steve Bartlett, president of...
Getting insight on the health care bill, with Angie...

Recent Polls

Will the Federal Reserve Exit from the Agency MBS Market as Planned?

Created By: Adam Quinones
  • Yes (60.5%)
  • No. They Will Extend Again (39.5%)

Federal Reserve MBS Purchase Program

MBS MORNING: Playing Follow the Leader in Light Volume

Posted
 Email Page   |     Print   |     Bookmark

Hi.

With a lack of market moving econ data and settlement day looming, trading flows in MBS world are slow and volume is sluggish. That said "rate sheet influential" coupons are  playing follow the leader with benchmark big brother TSYs. This just means the perceived rally is a function of traders updating hedge ratios and pricing tables as the yield curve gets crushed (flattens!)...not really any monumental demand for MBS out there today...any supply that has come to market has been easily absorbed by the Fed.

Currently the 10 yr TSY is up 35/32 and the FN 4.5 is near facemelting status (in terms of dollar price changes...not yield spread/relative value). As MBS prices tick higher we would expect lender bid lists to grow as originators will look to lock in pipeline profits at MBS price highs. Remember this is the good kind of MBS selling as it reduces interest rate risk from lender pipelines.

The 10 yr is at its lowest point since late May! Our bullish bias is strengthening as the recovery rally we discussed yesterday afternoon has ensued, however volume has been a bit lackluster today (460k 10 yr contracts traded so far) so we are still not willing to go into all out float mode. Although sentiment definitely favors fixed income, we are still defensive of overheated rallies....dont let your pipeline profits linger for too long! Take  YSP while you can and reevaluate rate sheets consistently (better this AM).

Dont forget that there is more to rate sheet formulation than MBS market price movements. (SEE LETTER FROM TBW CHAIRMAN)...warehouse lines are scarce and funding is a big issue for pass through investors! Pipeline management remains a hindrence.  GUTFLOP GUTFLOP GUTFLOP.

This morning I wrote on oil prices and the relevance to the economic outlook. NYMEX crude has failed to break $60 today, but isnt moving much lower either.

...and after a short term oversold recovery rally yesterday,the S&P has resumed its downward trend. The 882 neckline of the Head and Shoulders pattern has been broken, if the bearish indications from this pattern are correct then we would expect to see the S&P test 845, then 830. If some how, some way cash returns to the market and the risk averse feeling fades, a break over 910 would signal a bias reversal back to bullish, but we would need to see some volume and we just cant see it happening given current market conditions. Bank earnings will be key to that assumption...look for trading revenues to bolster balance sheets.

2s vs. 5s: 132bps

2s vs. 10s: 241bps

5s vs. 10s: 108bps

MBS, TSY, LIBOR QUOTES

G8 Recap

Trade Deficit Recap


Data provided by Thomson Reuters
Secondary Marketing Managers and Capital Markets Desks, if you are interested in subscribing to the same fixed income and mortgage market data we use:CLICK HERE.


Filed under: ,

Comments

Join Now or Login to Post Comments

on
I know this is a stupid question, but what do you mean by "Gutflop"?
on
So maybe I shouldn't have locked yesterday... :O) I promised myself that I needed to wean myself from MND and only visit twice per day. That didn't last more than 12 hours.
on
Its like poker. Play your hand. I have a question, how are loan officers doing on the home affordibility loans that had PMI originally and need to get it again?
on
Art, I had the same question. See answer here: http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/mortgage_rates/blog/49123.aspx. Or follow the links on the right side of the main mortgage blog page - under "MBS knowledge base" then "pipeline management theory".
on
Tom, I have enough willing clients to fill the pipeline for the next 6 months. Unfortunately, just about all of them have negative equity greater than 25%, so I can't answer your question. It's really a depressing issue here in FL and my question is how long are these people going to continue holding on? Hopefully, the program is working for some of you out there.
on
This client originally bought and put 15% down last year. The appraisal came back at brought it to a 93% LTV. I want to know if anyone thinks i will be able to close this person at a 93% LTV and get the PMI that they originally had. Guidelines say Yes but the word on the street is NO from the MI companies.