MBS Live: MBS Morning Market Summary
This morning's Employment Situation Report had been the most hotly anticipated piece of data for bond markets for the past three weeks, and with it's passing, both MBS and Treasuries are back at the weaker end of the ranges that prevailed 3 weeks ago.  After a string of mostly weaker data followed the last jobs report, markets were increasingly defensive against the prospect of further weakness.  By the start of this week, MBS and Treasuries were both in better shape than the levels that immediately followed March's jobs report (reported on 4/5).  Today's report, however, not only was stronger than expected, it also offered a substantial upward revision to that March report, quickly ushering MBS and Treasuries back from whence they came.  Markets were perhaps holding out for this morning's 10am data to offer some meaningful counterpoint (i.e. hoping they'd come in weak enough to prevent further losses) and although the data was weaker, it wasn't sufficient to stem the tide.  Prices slid incrementally lower from 10am to present.  At this point we've been consolidating between the lows of the day just after 10am and the post-NFP lows roughly 4 ticks higher (104-03 to 104-07).  There are fundamental economic reasons to hope we hold our ground here, but from a technical standpoint, entire months of momentum are more likely to follow any strong moves on NFP day.  
MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
FNMA 3.0
104-05 : -0-16
FNMA 3.5
106-05 : -0-12
FNMA 4.0
106-24 : -0-07
FNMA 4.5
107-17 : -0-04
GNMA 3.0
105-31 : -0-15
GNMA 3.5
108-14 : -0-12
GNMA 4.0
109-02 : -0-07
GNMA 4.5
108-24 : -0-04
FHLMC 3.0
103-24 : -0-16
FHLMC 3.5
105-29 : -0-12
FHLMC 4.0
106-15 : -0-08
FHLMC 4.5
106-23 : -0-05
Pricing as of 11:04 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.

10:34AM  :  ECON: Factory Orders Recap
- Factory Orders -4.0 vs -2.6 consensus
- Excluding Transportation -2.0 vs -0.7 previously
- Computers/Electronics orders +0.5 vs -2.5 previously

- Market Reaction: Same boat at ISM, but a less significant report. Not much of an impact, and not enough of a miss to reverse losses for bond markets.

New orders for manufactured durable goods in March decreased $13.1 billion or 5.7 percent to $216.3 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This decrease, down two of the last three months, followed a 4.3 percent February increase. Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 1.4 percent. Excluding defense, new orders decreased 4.7 percent.

Transportation equipment, also down two of the last three months, led the decrease, $11.0 billion or 15.0 percent to $62.4 billion. This was led by nondefense aircraft and parts, which decreased $8.5 billion.
10:29AM  :  ECON: ISM Non-Manufacturing Recap
- Headline index 53.1 vs 54.0 consensus
- Business Activity 55.0 vs 56.0 consensus
- New orders roughly unchanged
- Employment 52.0 vs 53.3
- Prices 51.2 vs 55.9
- headline index lowest since July
- Activity index and Prices lowest since June
- Employment lowest since Nov

- Market Reaction: Treasuries/MBS slightly weaker after the report. Even though it was weaker than expected, markets may have been hoping for more in order to stem the tide of losses.

The NMI™ registered 53.1 percent in April, 1.3 percentage points lower than the 54.4 percent registered in March. This indicates continued growth at a slightly slower rate in the non-manufacturing sector. The Non-Manufacturing Business Activity Index registered 55 percent, which is 1.5 percentage points lower than the 56.5 percent reported in March, reflecting growth for the 45th consecutive month. The New Orders Index decreased by 0.1 percentage point to 54.5 percent, and the Employment Index decreased 1.3 percentage points to 52 percent, indicating growth in employment for the ninth consecutive month. The Prices Index decreased 4.7 percentage points to 51.2 percent, indicating prices increased at a slower rate in April when compared to March. According to the NMI™, 14 non-manufacturing industries reported growth in April. Respondents' comments remain mostly positive about business conditions. Cost management and revenue pressures are areas of concern for many of the respective companies.
10:18AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: No Longer Sideways. MBS Losing More Ground After 10am Data
Perhaps bond markets were "holding out" to some extent--waiting to see if the 10am data would offer a helping hand against the post-NFP weakness. Indeed the data was weaker than expected, but not weak enough to allow for continued ground-holding in Treasuries/MBS.

10's are up to 1.726, hitting 1.73 briefly and Fannie 3.0s hit 104-03, remaining there currently. The early rate sheets are likely conservative enough that we can weather these losses if we hold here. Any move lower puts them at risk for negative reprices, however.

Looking forward to the rest of the day, It's safer to assume that the trajectory of losses from 8:35am to present will continue until proven otherwise.
9:51AM  :  Bond Markets Fighting To Hold Support Ahead Of Stocks/Data
If current levels are any indication, bond markets did a surprisingly good job of getting to where the needed to go following NFP. 10's continue flirting with 1.70 and Fannie 3.0s are still holding the 104-07 to 104-10 range. This is relatively excellent if it turns out to be "support" heading into the rest of the day, but such instances of support can sometimes merely be "flags" of consolidation before the initial move extends.

Zooming out on the 10yr chart we see an April range of 1.83 to 1.68 prevailed for most of the month before the first vestiges of the NFP "lead off" began at the end of the month. The most striking technical development over that time was the super narrow, super regular range bind lasting from 4/12 to 4/26.

Yields were locked between 1.68 and 1.733 during that time and current levels take us essentially into the middle of that range. When we saw how sideways and how regular that area turned out to be, and when we considered it in the historical context of the epic bounce off 1.674 back in 2011, it felt like this might be where we'd see the next shift in the long term range that had just rallied from nearly 2.10%! It would necessarily be a "bad thing" to pause for reflection after a 40bp directional rally.

At this point, a break below 1.675 would show some more resolve to break the choppy long term uptrend stretching back to July 2012, but a marked break above 1.733 would be one potential warning of a broader bounce back with 1.82-1.85 being the next bad of supportive yields.

MBS are in a very similar short term situation where prices have returned to the center their own range-bind that coincided with the 1.675-1.733 epoch of Treasury trading. For MBS it was 104-02 to 104-12. With prices currently at 104-07, we're smack dab in the middle.

Is this indecision? Resolve? Or merely consolidation? All valid questions, but they may not be possible to answer simply with today's reaction. The ISM Non-Manufacturing data suddenly becomes a bit more relevant assuming we make it to 10am with this ostensibly indecisive ground-holding in bond markets.

The PMI is seen at 54.0 vs 54.4 previously, and anything above that could tilt the scales enough to allow the bounce to extend a bit more. Whether or not it challenges the short term limits (1.733 in 10's or 104-02 in MBS) is less certain, but it should at least send us closer to one end of those recent ranges.

That said, keep in mind that this is an extremely bearish situation for bond markets in a historical context. Entire months of momentum in bonds, more often than not, follow the implication set by NFP at the beginning of the month. Two factors make that correlation stronger. The first factor is whether or not NFP falls at the end of prolonged move. In those cases, a contrary NFP almost always marks a bounce. The second factor is the size of the beat or miss of the report itself. In today's case, that's arguably not very big on the headline (165k vs 145k), but considering the revisions to previous months, and the defensive stance that got us to these levels, the size is perhaps a bit bigger than it looks on the surface.

Keep that in mind this afternoon, even when you're looking at crappier rate sheets, wondering if you'll get a bit back next week. It's historically less safe to assume that you will.
8:51AM  :  ECON: Employment Situation Report
- Payrolls 165k vs 145k
- March revised from 88k to 138k
- February revised from 268k to 332k
- U/E rate 7.5 pct, lowest since Dec 2008
- Labor Force Participation Rate 63.3, unchanged

Market reaction: 10's are tap-dancing around 1.70 while Fannie 3.0s are down 15 ticks at 104-07. S&P futures are up 12 points.

Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 165,000 in April, with job gains in professional and business services, food services and drinking places, retail trade, and health care. Over the prior 12 months, employment growth averaged 169,000 per month.

The unemployment rate, at 7.5 percent, changed little in April but has declined by 0.4 percentage point since January. The number of unemployed persons, at 11.7 million, was also little changed over the month; however, unemployment has decreased by 673,000 since January.
8:32AM  :  ALERT ISSUED: ECON: NFP Beats Consensus, Last Month Revised Much Higher
165k vs 145k consensus, last month revised to 138 from 88k previously, Feb revised to a ridiculously high 332k from 268k.

Bond markets tanking instantly to 1.69 in 10yr yields. MBS down to 104-10.

More to follow...
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.

Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ISM NON-MANUFACTURING BUSINESS ACTIVITY INDEX AND PRICES PAID INDEX AT LOWEST SINCE JUNE "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ISM NON-MANUFACTURING EMPLOYMENT INDEX 52.0 IN APRIL VS 53.3 IN MARCH "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ISM REPORT ON U.S. NON-MANUFACTURING SECTOR SHOWS PMI AT 53.1 IN APRIL (CONSENSUS 54.0) VS 54.4 IN MARCH "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - ISM NON-MANUFACTURING NEW ORDERS INDEX 54.5 IN APRIL VS 54.6 IN MARCH "
Andrew Horowitz  :  "giving props where props are due, great call CS"
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "ism lower than expected"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- ISM NON-MANUFACTURING BUSINESS ACTIVITY INDEX 55.0 IN APRIL (CONSENSUS 56.0) VS 56.5 IN MARCH "
Matthew Graham  :  "hey, so far so good at 1.7 Dirk! I'm willing to forgive the mini-break earlier for sure. I'll just be surprised if this morning doesn't make for at least a 1.55 range low if not 1.615 that we saw on Wed. Monthly momentum tends to follow NFP implications--not always, but usually. I think markets were looking for a reason to put in at least a short term bounce here. I think they just got it, and I'd be surprised (very surprised) if 1.70 ends up being the extent of the damage. Stranger things"
Dirk Postupack  :  "Chris....i am rooting for 1.50....I want to MG wear that shirt.....I will personnaly send it to him.....GO RICKSTER!"
Matthew Graham  :  "yep. the only real scary situation was considering a break into the 2's. We got some scary overrun in defending it, but it was ultimately well-defended and we've been seeking a new range ever since."
Christopher Stevens  :  "If we stay south of 1.72 today I'll call that a good day"
Kent Taylor  :  "buying my lock desk lunch - they gave me a lock with yesterdays price at 7:35 this AM - whew"
Christopher Stevens  :  "we have been 1.60 -2.05 range bou8nd since september"
Matthew Graham  :  "I will custom order a santelli t-shirt--2 of them--and wear one every day while the other one is in the wash, if we hold 1.70, or make it to 1.50. "
Matthew Graham  :  "yes"
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "Mg, who's dreaming? Santelli? "
Matthew Graham  :  "dreamin'"
Dirk Postupack  :  "santelli said our range is going to be between 1.5 and 1.7 for now"
Victor Burek  :  "companies firing 2 full timers, but hiring 3 part timers"
Victor Burek  :  "that drop in avg work week is big"
philip mancuso  :  "I'm the biggest bond bull in the world but I don't see a bounce unless we decode that somehow the numbers are bs"
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "is 1.7 going to be our line in the sand"
Andy Pada  :  "8:29 am priced 39 bps better than 8:37 am"
Joe Ridings  :  "Risk vs reward doesnt pay when we had such low rates to begin with. NFP too dangerous"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - U.S. APRIL AVERAGE WORKWK ALL PRIVATE WORKERS 34.4 HRS (CONS 34.6 HRS) VS MARCH 34.6 HRS (PREV 34.6 HRS), FACTORY 40.7 VS 40.8, OVERTIME 3.3 VS 3.4 "
Christopher Stevens  :  "anyone who doesnt do serius gutflop before NFP tape is crazy."
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION RATE 63.3 PCT IN APRIL VS 63.3 PCT IN MARCH "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL JOBLESS RATE 7.5 PCT, LOWEST SINCE DEC 2008 (CONSENSUS 7.6 PCT) VS MARCH 7.6 PCT (PREV 7.6 PCT) "
Jason Anker  :  "with you there"
Joe Ridings  :  "thank goodness i locked em all yesterday."
Andrew Horowitz  :  "big time revisions"
Victor Burek  :  "significant drop in avg work week..lots of part timers"
Jeff Anderson  :  "Feb revised to over 300k?"
Christopher Stevens  :  "1.72 here we come"
Matthew Graham  :  "revision is painful too"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS - US APRIL PRIVATE SECTOR JOBS +176,000 (CONS +160,000), MARCH +154,000 (PREV +95,000) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL NONFARM PAYROLLS +165,000 (CONSENSUS +145,000) VS MARCH +138,000 (PREV +88,000), FEB +332,000 (PREV +268,000) "
Andrew Horowitz  :  "ouch"
Victor Burek  :  "rut roh"
Paul Sushereba  :  "Eric, we will do it as long as they have 20% down. "
Eric Schuchaskie  :  "Broker friends - does anyone know if client had a chapt 7 last year but has 708 credit score - is there a lender out there for him - i get thsi question a lot"
Jeff Anderson  :  "GM, OSO. MBS' monthly Xmas Day. Do we get a shiny, new bike or a lump of coal today? I'm in the 110-130k range."
Oliver S. Orlicki  :  "Gm. Last day of a busy data week. Happy nfp Friday."

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