MBS Live: MBS Morning Market Summary
Please not the timestamp on the price table below as Fannie 3.0s are currently down 3 ticks at 101-19, but had been as low as 101-13 earlier this morning.  Negative reprice alerts on MBS Live went out at 11:20am, 11:56am, and 12:20pm.  Treasuries have had a calm morning while MBS had a mini-meltdown, moving to the lowest prices of the year, resulting in several investor reprices.  Durable Goods data had relatively little effect and instead the lack of liquidity in MBS began taking its toll just after 10am.  Buying triggers look to have been tripped at the lows (or "wides" in terms of MBS spread vs Treasuries).  Volatility was a possibility from the outset given the shortened trading day and the Quadruple Witching options/futures expirations in equities markets.  Thankfully it looks like we'll make it out the door relatively sideways after the morning drama.
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
101-24 : +0-02
FNMA 3.5
104-21 : +0-01
FNMA 4.0
106-04 : +0-01
FNMA 4.5
107-07 : +0-00
GNMA 3.0
103-04 : +0-02
GNMA 3.5
106-17 : +0-01
GNMA 4.0
107-09 : +0-02
GNMA 4.5
107-16 : +0-01
FHLMC 3.0
101-12 : +0-02
FHLMC 3.5
104-13 : +0-00
FHLMC 4.0
105-28 : +0-01
FHLMC 4.5
106-09 : -0-02
Pricing as of 11:02 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.

9:21AM  :  Bond Markets Rally Despite Durable Goods Beat
The pocket translator for trade-speak might characterize this morning as "fading the Durables print," where "fade" means to take up a counterintuitive position to that suggested by data or events among other things. That is to say, the data was stronger than expected, which traditionally implies negative price pressure on bond markets, and we're instead seeing a rally.

It's not just bond markets though. Equities are making the equivalent move with S&P futures off about 8 points from their post-data highs. For their part, MBS opened a few ticks into positive territory, weakened briefly on the initial data print and bounced in the other direction with everyone else, now 5 ticks higher on the day at 101-27.

Whether or not the positive momentum is sustainable into the early 2pm close remains to be seen, but simply holding ground above 101-16 is all we'd really need to keep hope alive for a bigger-picture supportive bounce next week.

From a tactical standpoint, the high 1.99's and low 2.00's in 10yr yields have been a key battleground over the past two days, coming into play as an ultra high volume pivot point yesterday and serving as a tough resistance floor to an overnight rally. At 1.998 moments ago, we were at the best levels of the night, but the biggest bounce yesterday was all the way down at 1.988 (feels like a very long distance for a single basis point).

There's no additional scheduled data today, and again, we close early for a 3-day weekend. Japan will be trading on Monday whereas we will not, and this could add some relative defensiveness into any intention to rally meaningfully past the aforementioned inflection point at 1.988. We'll cross that bridge (or not) when we come to it though, and for now, 10's have already shied away, back to 2.007 currently.

On a final note, it is a "quadruple witching" session, meaning that all open positions in single stock and stock index futures and options will have to be closed or rolled. This can be nothing more than a silly phrase to impress your friends over the holiday weekend ("sorry I'm late to the cookout guys/gals... You know how it is, what with Quadruple Witching and all...") or it can be cause of inexplicably motivated volatility. So far so good on that note, but things probably won't die down meaningfully until lunch time in New York, which tends to be like the Bermuda triangle on early close Friday's ahead of 3 day weekends.
8:39AM  :  ECON: Durable Goods Stronger Than Expected
- Headline +3.3 vs +1.5 forecast, -5.9 previously
- Ex Transportation +1.3 vs +0.5 forecast
- Nondefense orders, excluding aircraft +1.2 vs +0.5 forecast

Market Reaction: So far so good with bond markets bouncing back after an initial obligatory blip to the downside. Back in line with 8:30am levels now.

New orders for manufactured durable goods in April increased $7.2 billion or 3.3 percent to $222.6 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This increase, up two of the last three months, followed a 5.9 percent March decrease. Excluding transportation, new orders increased 1.3 percent. Excluding defense, new orders increased 2.1 percent.

Transportation equipment, also up two of the last three months, led the increase, $5.1 billion or 8.1 percent to $67.6 billion. This was led by nondefense aircraft and parts, which increased $1.9 billion.
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.

Mike Pennington  :  "This looks like a smaller version of the start of yesterday"
Jason Sheaffer  :  "Same pattern, green now, red by 11. "
Matthew Graham  :  "bit of hesitation there. "
Matthew Graham  :  "just broke overnight low yields in 10's"
Josh Stika  :  "Today - Today will be the Friday we hold the gains"
Mike Drews  :  "pm--maybe 1.98"
philip mancuso  :  "I wonder if we can get to 1.89 by 2:00?"
Matthew Graham  :  "'buy into,' as in, should a rally increase optimism for next week and vice versa? I personally would only read "ok, so there's still a chance" into a day that held it's ground for the most part, if that makes sense."
Josh Stika  :  "I would imagine that volume will be pretty low today - should we buy into any movement today (positive or negative)??"
Niccolo Satullo  :  "exciting, needed weekend ahead for all of us "
Matthew Graham  :  "remember durables tend to alternate around unchanged, so it takes a bigger beat on occasions where the forecast is positive than it would if the forecast was opposite the result. Those have been the beats/misses that have had the bigger effect."
Niccolo Satullo  :  "The biggest effects have been felt"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- US APRIL NONDEFENSE CAP ORDERS EX-AIRCRAFT +1.2 PCT (CONS +0.5 PCT) VS MARCH +0.9 PCT (PREV -0.6 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL DURABLES EX-DEFENSE +2.1 PCT VS MARCH -4.4 PCT (PREV -5.6 PCT"
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- U.S. APRIL DURABLES EX-TRANSPORTATION +1.3 PCT (CONS +0.5 PCT) VS MARCH -1.7 PCT (PREV -2.9 PCT) "
Matthew Graham  :  "RTRS- US APRIL DURABLES ORDERS +3.3 PCT (CONSENSUS +1.5 PCT) VS MARCH -5.9 PCT (PREV -6.9 PCT) "
Victor Burek  :  "that's what they sell to their clients, but they will be buyers..did same with mortgages"
Christopher Stevens  :  "Goldman Sachs take on rates titled "The Bond Sell-Off: It's For Real http://granitaebrioche.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-bond-sell-off-its-for-real.html"
Jason Anker  :  "the worst"
Jeff Anderson  :  "GM, all. TGIF. I hope this Friday is better than the last 3. And JA2, I hope that was written in a bad English accent."
David Gaffin  :  "let's hope so Jason"
Jason Anker  :  "today needs to confrim this as a hard floor or we are in barney"

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