With both sides signing the peace memo, the market was immediately willing to react in the overnight session, but that reaction fell short of what we might expect for an official peace deal. This is a bond market problem more than an Iran war problem. Case in point, oil prices stayed flat after their big overnight drop. Stocks added to strong overnight gains. Bonds were the odd man out. Part of the reason is that bonds did more than stocks to get in position for this eventuality last week. As of today, both the S&P and 10yr are close enough to the best recent levels to say the overall market reaction has been fairly even keeled. We'd also expect more bullishness among bond traders when the deal is officially official (possibly after Friday's scheduled meeting in Switzerland). Finally, bonds could be holding back a bit to see how Wednesday's Fed announcement goes.
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- NY Fed Manufacturing (Jun)
- 5.70 vs 14 f'cast, 19.60 prev
- Industrial Production (May)
- 0.1% vs 0.3% f'cast, 0.7% prev
- NY Fed Manufacturing (Jun)
Nice rally overnight on confirmation of U.S./Iran peace deal with scheduled signing. MBS up nearly a quarter point and 10yr down 3.3 bps at 4.452
MBS still up 7 ticks (.22) and 10yr down 2.4bps at 4.461
MBS up 5 ticks (.16) and 10yr down 2.2bps at 4.463

