Friday, December 30, 2011

Market Update for Thursday 12-29-2011

Early this morning the 10-Year Note and mortgages opened a little weaker.  Italy’s auctions didn’t do as well today as the shorter-term auctions did yesterday.  Italian 10-Year Bonds fell, pushing yields toward the highest this month, after the nation raised less than its maximum target at an auction of debt due between 2014 and 2022.  Portuguese and Spanish securities also declined and the euro weakened to a 15-month low against the dollar after Italy agreed to pay a yield of 6.98% on securities maturing in 2022, close to the 7% level that prompted euro-area peers to seek bailouts.  The Italian 10-Year Bond after the auction is trading over 7.00% at 7.07%.

Italy did sell its debt offerings, a good thing, but the rate was higher than thought and in after market trade the rate is now above 7.00% that markets have set as a benchmark for its 10-Year debt offerings.  The reaction has been muted so far this morning, except in the currency market where the euro currency continued to decline to the weakest level since September 2010 against the dollar,  and the weakest against the yen in 10 yrs. 

At 830am Weekly Jobless Claims were expected to be up 4K, as reported claims increased 15K to 381K. Continuing claims also increased, to 3.601 million from 3.567 million the week before.  The 4-week average, a smoother look at claims was 375,000 down from 380,750.  Claims still declining even with the increase but there was no noticeable reaction to the report in either stocks or interest rates.

At 930am the DJIA opened up +30, the 10-Year Note was unchanged and mortgage prices were down -2/32 (.06 bp).

The last key economic report of this year at 945am is the December Chicago Purchasing Managers Index.  In November the index hit a recent high at 62.6.  The index was expected to have declined in December to 60.1.  As reported the index hit at 62.5 from a revised 62.6 in November; New Orders index at 68 from 702, Prices Paid at 65.7 frpm 60.2 and Employment at 58.6 from 56.9 (any index over 50 is considered expansion).  There was little to no reaction to the data.

At 1000am the NAR reported November Pending Home Sales (contracts signed but no yet closed), expected up 0.6%.

The rest of the day bonds and mortgages will track equities.  The stock market is holding a gain of about 65 points at 1000am.  Trade should be contained through the rest of the session.  Technically, the U.S. 10-Year Note escaped from breaking down yesterday with the rally that returned the 10-Year Note below 2.00%.  If equity markets were to fall the 10-Year Note and mortgages will improve, but not much.

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Market Update for Wednesday 12-28-2011

The bond and mortgage markets started a little better this morning but with very thin volume.  The 10-Year Note and MBSs are toying with key technical levels now and if the rally is to continue the 10-Year Note must get back below 2.00% and hold there…something that it hasn’t been able to achieve for any length of time.  Italy sold more debt in a successful auction today increasing European stocks and supporting the U.S. equity markets in pre-opening trade.

Italy‘s borrowing costs are declining, lessening concerns of default.  The country sold 9 billion euros ($11.8B) of 6-month Treasury Bills at half the yield it agreed to pay at an auction of the securities last month.  The Rome-based Treasury sold the 179-Day bills at a rate of 3.251%, down from 6.504% on November 25th.  Demand was 1.7 times the amount of the offer, compared with 1.47 times last month.  It also sold 1.733 billion euros of 2013 notes today to yield 4.853%, compared with a yield of 7.814% at the last auction on November 25th.  The bid-to-cover ratio was 2.24, compared with 1.59 last month.  Tomorrow Italy will auction four different securities, including a 10-Year bond; if the 10-Year Bond rate is under 7.00% it will be considered a good auction.

The reaction to the strong Italian auctions lessens the demand for U.S. treasuries, at least for the moment,however by 900am this morning after some minor selling in Treasuries on the auction news, the 10-Year Note was back to its best levels prior to the auction results.  At 930am the DJIA opened up +7, the 10-Year Note was up +5/32 at 1.98% (-2 bp) and mortgage prices were up +5/32 (.15 bp).

Retail Sales in the week prior to Christmas were up 4.5% last week from a year earlier,according to data reported this morning.  Sales for the week ending December 24th increased 0.9% from the previous week, according to a chain-store sales index released today by New York-based International Council of Shopping Centers.  Yesterday December Consumer Confidence Index jumped much more than thought with expectations of 58 from 55.2 in November; as released the index was 64.5 the highest since last April.  Weekly Jobless Claims have been declining for the last month.  The November Unemployment Rate fell to 8.6% from 9.0%, as expected.  November housing starts, permits and sales of existing and new home sales were better than forecast.  The December Philadelphia Federal Reserve Index, as well as the Empire State Manufacturing Indexes were also better than estimates.  GDP forecasts for growth in 2012 are up +2.4% while 2011 was 2.00%.

Treasuries and mortgages are increasingly facing stronger headwinds.  With the recent data and at least for the moment some relaxation of European fears, it is looking more likely that the decline in U.S. rates may be ending.  Technicals are being tested but still holding and the likelihood of further declines in rates is becoming questionable.  Likely, U.S. rates would be under some pressure this morning if it were not for the long weekend ahead.

The good news so far today is that the bond and mortgage markets are trading better, ignoring the Italian auctions and the recent better economic data.  There isn’t any data today and volume will continue to be light.  Although rate markets are doing OK so far, there isn’t anything out there that is adding support this morning except what so far appears to be a soft equity market.  The 10-Year Note has been testing its key averages recently but each times o far the note has managed to hold its positive bias.  Don’t fight the tape, even though interest rates are likely to increase in the next month or two.

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Market Update for Tuesday 12-27-2011

Last Friday Treasuries took a fairly large hit as traders backed away from heavy long positions into the long weekend.  mortgage prices were soft all day on thin trading following the bond market.  This morning Treasuries opened a little better with mortgage prices generally unchanged from Friday’s close. This week is still in holiday mode with many not working.  The week doesn’t have much data and it is unlikely there will be much out of Europe to jostle markets until after the first of the year.

The bellwether 10-Year Note continues to resist trading much under 2.00% but the averages are moving lower daily from the 20-day average to the 100-day average.  Unless the bond market continues to improve quickly the technical picture will change to a more bearish outlook.  In our opinion unless there is an actual default in Europe the U.S. rate markets are going to turn slightly bearish with yields increasing somewhat.  We’re not looking for a big increase in rates but the prolonged rally looks as if it has stalled.  The U.S. Government received record demand for its bonds in 2011, pushing longer-maturity Treasuries to their best performance since 1995; a very weak economy, no inflation and a huge fear factor contributed to the decline in rates.

This is the time of year when we hear a multitude of economic forecasts from economists.  From what we have read over the last few days, the consensus for 2012 is better based on various surveys.  Economists surveyed by Bloomberg and Reuters are expecting GDP growth in 2012 up +2.4% from 2011.  Of course most forecasts have the caveat that Europe could drag the world back into recession and a global credit crisis if banks in the region fail or sovereign debt defaults occur.  2012 like 2011 will be held captive by Europe’s continuing inability to accomplish much so far.

The S&P/Case-Shiller Index of Property Values in 20 cities dropped 3.4% from October 2010after decreasing 3.5% in the year ended September, the New York-based group said today.  The median forecast of 27 economists in a Bloomberg News survey projected a 3.2% decrease.  This report gets little if any attention from bond traders because there’s no real news in it.

At 1000am December Consumer Confidence Index expected at 58 from 56 in November.  As reported the Confidence Index jumped to its highest level since April 2011 to 64.5 from a revised November report at 55.2; the Present Situation Index increased to 46.7 from 38.3 and the Expectations Index up to 76.4 from 66.4.  A much better outlook from last month and was better than expected.  There was however no reaction to the data in either the stock or bond market…so far.

 

This Week’s Economic Calendar:

12/27/11: 0900am October Case/Shiller Housing Index (as reported down -3.4%).

1000am December Consumer Confidence Index (as reported 64.5 from 55.2).

12/29/11: 0830am Weekly Jobless Claims (up +4K to 368K).

0945am Chicago Purchasing Managers Index (down to 60.1 from 62.6).

1000am November Pending Home Sales (u p+0.6%).

 

At 0930am the DJIA opened down -20; the 10-Year Note was up +2/32 at 2.01% and mortgage Prices at 0930am were generally unchanged.

Not looking for much this week; another short week and year-end doldrums should keep things relatively quiet until next week.  The technical picture is weakening the bond market.  Unless the 10-Year Note improves and holds under 2.00% (which up until now has not occurred) rates from a technical outlook will likely begin to increase next week.

 

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Market Update for Friday 12-23-2011

Treasuries and mortgages opened weaker this morning in very light trading, most traders are off today.  The markets will close early this afternoon; all but the stock market that will go with normal hours.

At 830am November Durable Goods Orders were up 3.8% (forecasts +2.0%); excluding transportation orders up 0.3% as expected; demand for aircraft outweighed declines in spending on computers and equipment.  Demand for business equipment excluding military hardware and aircraft dropped 1.2% in November, the biggest decline since January 2011.  November Personal Income and Spending were both up 0.1% but slightly weaker than expected.  The stock market opened +41 on increasing belief at the moment that the U.S. economy is recovering and improving.  Whether that is the case, at the present that is what is believed.  Weaker income and spending isn’t very encouraging.

The House finally passed the Payroll Tax Extension last night.  The House plans to clear the bill later today for President Barack Obama’s signature.  It would extend a two-percentage-point payroll tax cut, continue expanded unemployment benefits and head off a reduction in Medicare payments to doctors through February.  Lawmakers plan to negotiate on a longer-term plan in the new year.

The view that the U.S. economy is gaining momentum is questionable.  Based on recent reports it looks decent but there are an equal number of recent economic reports that refute the view of improvement.  This morning’s data were not bell ringers; Income and Spending lower than expected and Durable Goods Orders without the volatile aircraft industry wasn’t that good.  Nevertheless, at the moment markets are holding an optimistic outlook, although the view can change quickly.

November New Home Sales at 1000am are expected up 1.9% but were up only 1.6% to 315K annualized units.  November New Home Sales were the highest since April 2011 but based on the current sales pace there is a 6 month supply, the lowest since March 2006 with a median sales price of $214,000.00.  The mortgageinterest rate markets ticked a little weaker on the data.

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Market Update for Thursday 12-22-2011

Weekly Jobless Claims were expected to have increased by 14K based on surveysof economists and analysts; claims as reported fell 4K to 364K, the lowest weekly filings since April 2008.  Continuing claims fell 79K to 3.55 million; continuing claims figure does not include the number of Americans receiving extended benefits under federal programs.  Those who’ve used up their traditional benefits and are now collecting emergency and extended payments decreased by about 136,300 to 3.51 million in the week ended Dec. 3rd.  Declining claims for the past three weeks is evidence that firings are declining and in turn should foreshadow an increase in employment and possible consumer spending.

At 830am the final read on Q3 GDPis expected to be unchanged from the Preliminary Report at +2.0%, growth was revised lower to +1.8%.  Stock indexes were strong prior to 830am.  Claims added some support but the GDP weighed on the other side.  Nevertheless the indexes managed to hold gains but less than before the data.

At 930am the DJIA opened quietly +20, the 10-Year Note was +9/32 at 1.94% (-2 bp) and mortgage prices were +4/32 (.09 bp).

At 955am the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index was expected to be 68.0 from 67.7 but  the index jumped to 69.9; Current Conditions Index at 79.6 from 77.9 and the 12-Month Outlook Index at 70.0 frm 64.0.  Much stronger Consumer Sentiment added a few points to the DJIA but not much.  The reaction in the bond market was also subdued.

The final data today at 1000am is November Leading Economic Indicators expected up 0.3% increased +0.5%.

Europe still gets most of the attention and there’s always something to talk about given the cliff the region is teetering on.  Not much market-driving info today.  The remainder of the day will be on thinner volume with the equity market taking the lead.  So far this morning the stock market is struggling with the weaker GDP report for Q3 and better Weekly Jobless Claims.  The bond market is focused on the soft GDP but will lose gains if the equity markets take hold later today.  Conversely if indexes succumb. bonds will do better.  That said, we do not expect much today with the Christmas Holiday beginning tomorrow. 

Interesting reactions today in the stock and bond markets;the data reported for the most part was better than thought, except toe Q3 GDP.  After examining all the data the two markets are essentially unchanged from levels prior to the 830am reports.  Still a bullish bias for the mortgage rate markets but if the holidays were not a factor the bond market would likely be soft.  With the mess in Europe investors are not likely to lighten up on safety moves.

For more information please visti www.crestico.com

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Market Update for Wednesday 12-21-2011

Early this morning the stock indexes were better after the strong rally yesterday.  The bond and mortgagemarkets are under pressure and by 900am the indexes reversed and were lower, taking the rate markets back to unchanged.  Trade continues to thin out with holidays coming on quickly, increasing the potential of volatility.  Europe still holds the key.  Yesterday’s rally in equities and selling in the bond market was driven to a large extent by Spain’s sale of 3-Month Bills at a rate about 4.0% lower than last month.

The E.C.B. awarded 489 billion euros ($645B) in 3-Year loans today,the most ever in a single operation and more than economists’ median estimate of 293 billion euros.  The E.C.B. said 523 banks asked for the funds, which will be lent at the average of its benchmark interest rate, currently 1.0% over the period of the loans.  The E.C.B. is trying to ensure that banks have access to cheap cash for the medium term so they can keep lending to companies and households.  In addition to the longer-term loans, the E.C.B. has widened the pool of collateral banks can use to secure the funds.

The DJIA opened slightly better at 930am up +10; the 10-Year Note was up +2/32 at 1.92% unchanged andmortgage prices were up +1/32 (.03 bp).

The weekly MBA mortgage Applications were down last week.  The Market Composite Index, a measure ofmortgage loan application volume, decreased 2.6% on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier.  Therefinance Index decreased 1.6% from the previous week.  The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 4.9% from one week earlier.  The refinance share of mortgage activity reached a high this year of 80.7% of total applications from 79.7% the previous week.  The Adjustable-Rate mortgage (ARM) share of activity decreased to a low this year of 5.1% from 5.6% of total applications from the previous week.

At 1000am, a few minutes ago, November Existing Home Saleswere expected up 2.2%, actually increased 4.0% to 4.4 million.  The median sales price at $164,200 is a decline of 3.5% year-to-year.  Based on sales there is a 7 month supply. The NAR revised sales between 2007 and 2010 down another 14% based on double listings.  The revised sales show sales were even lower than what had been reported.

At 100pm the Treasury will auction $29B of 7-Year Notes to complete this week’s borrowing.  The 2-Year Note and 5-Year Note didn’t meet recent strong demand but both were modestly OK.

There is nothing new here;the bond market trade is moving on how the equity market indexes trade and so far this morning stock indexes are weaker supporting the bond and mortgage markets.  The MBS market isn’t doing much recently with slight gains when the Treasury markets rally and not much decline in prices when treasuries trade lower in price, as they did yesterday.  We continue to believe the bond and mortgage markets will trade in narrow ranges through the remainder of the year.

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Market Update for Tuesday 12-20-2011

After a big drop in U.S. long-term Treasuries over the last few days, this morning the 10-Year Note is backing awaywith U.S. stock indexes aiming for a better open at 930am.  At 900am the 10-Year Note opened -16/32 at 1.86% +5 bp and MBSs -7/32 (.22 bp) from yesterday’s closes.  Europe’s stock markets traded better this morning.  The U.S. indexes were better prior to 830am then got an additional boost when November Housing Starts and Permits were reported.  Both Starts and Permits were expected to be weaker (-0.8% or starts and -2.8% on permits) as reported.  Starts increased 9.3% and Permits increased 5.7%.  Starts are the highest in a year; multifamily are starts are at a three year high.  New construction of single-family houses rose 2.3% from the prior month to a 447,000 annual rate; the most since June.  Work on multifamily homes surged 25% to an annual rate of 238,000; the highest level since September 2008.

Europe’s equity markets are better on data from Germany and the U.K. was better than expectations.German business confidence climbed in December, suggesting Europe’s largest economy is weathering the euro area’s debt crisis.  The gauge of business confidence, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, rose to 107.2 from 106.6 in November, the Munich-based Ifo institute said today.  Consumer confidence in the U.K. rose in November from a record low as consumer expectations for the economy improved in the run-up to Christmas.  Momentary reports are not likely to be sustainable but today they are pushing equity markets higher in the region.

Fitch lowered France’s credit outlook and put other euro-area nations on review December 16th, saying an overall crisis solution may be “technically and politically beyond reach.” Italy’s benchmark 10-year Bond yield returned yesterday above 7%, the level that led Greece, Portugal and Ireland to seek bailouts, before falling below the threshold.

At 100pm this afternoon Treasury will auction $35 billion of 5-Year Notes;yesterday’s 2-Year Note Auction wasn’t as well bid as we and many expected.  Over the last couple of months Treasury auctions had been strong.  Yesterday’s 2-Year Note auction wasn’t that weak, but in comparison to recent borrowings it was a little disappointing.  The 5-Year Note auction today should see better bidding.  If not look for yields to edge a little higher with $29 billion of 7-Year Notes tomorrow.

Stock indexes exploded on the open,up 160 on the DJIA then continued higher.  After 10 minutes the DJIA was +218.  Interest rates were up this morning on the equity market.  The 10-Year Note at 1.87% is +6 bp.  mortgageprices at 930am were -5/32 (.15 bp).

Long term rates are at levels that may be hard to continue lower;the 10-Year Note closed at 1.81% yesterday, 11 bps frm the all-time low at 1.70% hit in late September.  If Europe wasn’t in the headlines everyday with its inability to remove fears that the E.U. will break apart, that Spain, Italy and the regions banks won’t implode in defaults and insolvency,  U.S. interest rates would likely be 50 to 60 basis points higher.  In the U.S. the economy is improving.  About every data point over the last month has been better than thought.  The only reason U.S.rates are at these low levels is because money from around the world is moving to the safest place…the U.S. Treasury market.

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

 

Monday, December 19, 2011

Market Update for Monday 12-19-2011

Quiet but weak start today in the bond and mortgage markets.  Europe’s stock markets are better except for the U.K. with its index down slightly.  This week is likely to have thin trading with the holiday and an early close in the bond market on Friday.  Although there are a number of key economic reports (mostly November Housing), the Treasury will auction $99 billion of notes and Europe has a self-imposed deadline today for drawing additional aid to the debt crisis and to form new budget  rules.  Trade should be quietly unchanged by the end of the week.  That said, if there is any significant change in the bond and stock markets it will be triggered by events in Europe.  Euro-area officials aim to meet their deadline for toady to arrange the I.M.F. loans.  The package entails about 150 billion euros pledged by euro-area central banks and another 50 billion euros to be contributed by non-euro E.U. states.

At 930am the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) opened up +27, the 10-Year Note traded down -3/32 andmortgage prices were down -3/32.

The only scheduled data today, December NAHB Housing Market Index was expected at 20, increased to 21 from 19 in November.  Single Family Index was at 22 from 20, Next 6-Months Index increased to 26 from 25 (50 is the pivot for the indexes, above = expansion, below = contraction).

At 100pm the Treasury will auction $35 billion of 2-year Notes, likely it will be strongly bid as have been most Treasury Auctions recently.  The death of Kim Jun Il in North Korea should add more to the demand for U.S. debt.

 

This Week’s Economic Calendar:

11/19/11: 1000am – December NAHB Housing Market Index.

0100pm – $35 billion 2-Year Note Auction.

11/20/11: 0830am – November Housing Starts and Permits (starts -0.8%, permits -2.8%).

0100pm – $35 billion 5-Year Note Auction.

11/21/11: 0700am – MBA mortgage Applications.

1000am – November Existing Home Sales (+2.2%).

0100pm – $29 billion 7-Year Note Auction.

11/22/11: 0830am – Weekly Jobless Claims (+14k to 380k).

- Q3 Final GDP (+2.0%, unchanged from Preliminary Report last Month).

0955am – University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (68.0 from 67.7).

1000am – November Leading Economic Indicators (+0.3%).

- FHFA October Price Index (+0.3%).

11/23/11: 0830am – November Durable Goods Orders (+0.2% excluding transportation orders +0.3%).

- November Personal Income and Spending (income +0.2%, spending +0.3%).

1000am – Novemeber Home Sales (+1.9%).

Last week the 10-Year Note yield declined 25 bps, mortgage prices down 10 bps.  Technically the bond market has improved while the MBS market still holding nicely, is being propped up by treasuries.  Europe is still the key driver for lower U.S. rates on movements into the U.S. dollar through safety into treasuries.  The low yield on the 10-Year Note occurred in September at 1.70% when Europe’s debt problems infected Italy and Spain.  Whether yields will get back to the historic lows depends on what happens in Europe and that’s difficult to handicap.  There has been nothing bu talk an plans but so far no progress to head off defaults or anything that pulls the region back from the cliff edge.

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

 

Friday, December 16, 2011

Market Update for Friday 12-16-2011

Yesterday the bond and mortgage markets were unchanged in very narrow ranges all day.  Today the markets are stariing the same way with little change from yesterday’s closes.  At 830am November Consumer Price Index (CPI), the only data taday, the overall and the core were expected up +0.1%; as reported the overal was unchanged and the core (excluding food and energy) were up +0.2%.  There was no reaction to the higher core in the bond market.

The stock indexes in pre-opening trade were better.  At 900am the DJIA was up 63 points.  At 930am the DJIA opened +55 points, the 10-Year Note was up 7/32 at  1.89%, mortgage prices were up +1/32.

In Europe the various stock exchanges are mixed with the FTSE up in the U.K.  Germany and French markets were unchanged.  U.S. equities are optimistic the European Union (E.U.) will meet a December 19 deadline for funding a crisis-fighting package.  U.S. stocks snapped a three-day decline yesterday after reports on jobless claims and manufacturing boosted confidence in the U.S. economic improvement.  According to leaders in Europe, the E.U. should meet an informal  December 19 deadline for arranging loans to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as part of a crisis-fighting package.  E.U. leaders decided at a December 9 summit to channel an additional 200 billion euros ($261 billion) in loans to the IMF to help fight the euro region’s debt crisis.

Europe remains key to keeping U.S. interest rates low.  If Europe wasn’t facing this crisis, U.S. interest ratesgiven the recent improvements in most economic readings, the 10-Year Note and mortgages would likely be 25 to 30 basis points (bps) higher in rates.  ECB President Mario Draghi announced a plan to offer lenders unlimited funds for three years after the central bank’s policy meeting on December 8th.  The result has Spanish and Italian notes better today, leading gains in euro-area debt, on speculation that banks bought the securities to use as collateral when the European Central Bank staarts offering three-year loans next week.

The bellwether 10-Year Note yield at 1.88% is 2 basis points from its recent low yield this morning. mortgages are just sitting with no change yesterday and so far this morning.  In past moves when the 10-Year Note traded below 2.00%, it lasted just three days before it moved back over 2.00%.  This time the downward trend may last longer as investors begin to wind down for the year.  With Europe still a constant ticking bomb, investors and traders are not likely to back off treasuries much.  Technically the bond market is still holding a bullish bias, morgage markets slightly so but still in decent shape.  With the weekend here toady, it’s likely to be quiet with narrow ranges.

For more information please visit our website www.crestico.com

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Market Update for Wednesday 12-14-2011

Treasuries and mortgages were unchanged in early activity this morning with U.S. stock indexes weaker.  At 930am the 10-Year Note traded +4/32 at 1.95% and mortgage prices were +3./32 (.09 bps).  The debt crisis in Europe is not getting better.  It’s actually worsening after the E.U. summit fumbled again with nothing but way out plans.  Moody’s said on Monday that last week’s euro crisis summit didn’t provide new measures which would lead to a resolution of Europs’s debt problems and it would review European Union sovereign ratings in the first quarter of 2012.  S&P said before the meeting that it may cut the credit rankings of euro members.  Italy sold 5-Year Notes at the highest rate in 14 years.  More eidence that the debt mess is nowhere close to any resolution.  In the U.K. additional evidence Europe is moving back into recesion; the unemployment rate increased to 8.3% from 7.9% in the latest quarter.  Unemployment among 16-24 year olds climbed 54,000 to 1.03 million, or 22%, the highest since comparable records began in 1992.

Yesterday’s FOMC meeting disappointed investors with the Federal Reserve unwilling to add more easing.  Stocks in Europe were weaker and the U.S. markets expexted to open soft at 930am.  In the FOMC statement the Federal Reserve said that there is an “apparent slowing in global growth and that strains in global financial markets continue to pose dignificant downside risks to the economic outlook.”  While admitting the obvious, the Fed also said the U.S. recovery is moving slowly but in a positive direction.

November export prices were up 0.1% while import pices increased 0.7%; no reaction in the markets to the report.  At 100pm the Treasury will finish this week’s auctions with $13 billion of 30-Year Bonds.  It wil likely be very well bid as was yesterday’s strong 10-Year Note Auction.  The 10-Year Note trading now below 2.00%; can it be sustatined?  Since the beginning of November, every move below 2.00% has been short-lived.  After the blown E.U. summit last week there is a renewed run for safety into U.S. treasuries.  While history is important, this time may be different in that Europe has clearly demonstrated there is no immediate way to deal with the possibility of defaults in Italy and Spain.  While unlikely defaults will actually occur, investors are not going to accept that as a given.

The weekly MBA mortgage Applications were weaker on purchases but better on refinances.  The volume of purchase applications swung lower in the December 9 week; down 8.2% versus 8.3% in the prior week.  Swings in weekly data can be severe but the overall trend for purchase applications has been positive.  The volume of applications for reFinancing has also been positive, up 9.3% on top of the prior week’s 15.3% gain.  Lowmortgage rates are behind the demand with the 30-Year averaging 4.12%, down 6 basis points (bps) for the lowest rate of the year.

At 100pm the Treasury will auction $13 billion of 30-Year Bonds.  Look for another stong auction with good demand.

So far this morning not much movement in the bond and mortgage markets.  The stock market opened weaker but also hs seen little movement.  Technically the bond market remains bullish.  The 10-Year Note is under 2.00%, which is nice, but can it hold?  In past moves below 2.00%, buying dried up and the 10-Year Note moved quickly back above 2.00%.  It depends on U.S. equity markets and the turmoil in Europe.  After last week’s disappointment over the E.U. summit meeting that produced nothing, there was another round of safe haven buying.  Based on history the 10-Year Note won’t hold below 2.00% for long.  Take advantage of the current rates

For more information please visit www.crestico.com

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Market Update for Tuesday 12-13-2011

Treausries and mortgages opened a little soft early this morning with Europe’s stock markets better and trade in U.S. futures pointing to a better open at 930am. At 830am November Retail Sales were not as strong as expected; sales were up 0.2% both overall and excluding auto sales. Expectations were for both sales to be up 0.6% overall and +0.5% excluding auto sales. The weaker sales didn’t impact either the stock or bond markets; both held where they were prior to 830am. In Europe, Spain sold more securities than expected and a report showed that investor conidence in Germany improved. Nothing has changed from yesterday. Europe’s banks are beginning to sell assets that generate profits to increase capital that is demanded by European regulators to make banks increase core capital to 9% by June 2010 instead of 2019. Euro banks can’t successfully sell stock or get anyone to buy their debt holdings with values so low banks would have to book losses. Selling businesses that generate profits will further slow recovery in the region but with the inability to provide debt relief throught tje E.U., E.C.B. or I.M.F., selling off assest is the only course left. Banks across Euriop have pledged to cut more that 950 billion euros of assets over the next two years about two-thirds of that will come from sales of profitable units and performing loans. At 930am the DJIA opened at +60; the 10-Year Note was +11/32 at 2.06% (+4 bps); mortgage prices were -5/32 (.15 bps). Treausry will sell $21 billion of 10-Year Notes at 100pm. The auction should go well with strong bidding. Recent Treausry Auctions have met with strong demand as was yesterday’s $32 billion of 3-Year Note sale. The FOMC is meeting today in a one-day meeting; the policy statement will be released at 215pm. Most Federal Reserve watchers are expecting a slightly better outlook on the economy from the group. There is little belief the Federal Reserve will launch a QE3, as had been hoped a month ago. Two weeks ago the view among dealers was that the Federal Reserve would likely increase its purchases of mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) to assist in keeping mortgage rates low. There hasn’t been anymore talk about it since then. With the economy looking better based on recent data, the Federal Reserve isn’t likely to see the necesity in more easing of any type. Trade this morning is likely to be quiet ahead of the auction and the FOMC statement at 215pm later today. The Federal Reserve is very unlikely to issue a statement that will surprise. The Federal Reserve is doing everything it can to not roil markets anymore that what Europe is already doing to global markets. Regardless of the constant run of news reports out of Europe, and the lack of any significant near-term progress (the summit last week focused on fiscal union among members that will take months if not years to resolve and didn’t address the debt messes would be dealt with), the U.S. rate markets have not continued to improve. The 10-Year Note has hit a brick wall at 2.00% and another at 2.12%. For over a month and against all the negativity out of Europe’s fumbling its situation, the long end of the yield curve has been essemtially unchanged. The fears of debt defaults in Europe have lessened a little while the U.S. economy has shown improvement albeit small. Europe will continue to keep U.S. rates low but pulling the other direction is what appears to be a better economy. Neither issue is a lock, the end result is current stagnation in the interest rate sector.

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Monday, December 12, 2011

Market Update for Monday 12-12-2011

Treasuries and mortgages opened a little better this morning after last week that ended with no changes inrates or prices.  The E.U. summit last week was another miss, nothing of consequence out of the continual run of meetings that lead to nowhere.  Europe’s debts are so huge that there is no solution without a break up of the 13-year experiment that went along OK as long as there wasn’t a problem.  Moody’s Investors Service said today it will review the ratings of all European Union nations after last week’s summit failed to produce “decisive policy measures”, while Standard & Poor’s announced December 5th that it may cut 15 euro members, including AAA rated Germany and France.  AAA bonds in Europe are a thing of the past.  Disappointed with the outcome of the Brussels talks, the yields on 10-Year bonds sold by Italy, that must repay about 53 billion euros in the first quarter of next year, climbed above 6.50% after falling on December 9th.  France’s note yield was at 3.29%, from 3.13% a week ago.

By 900am this morning The 10-Year Note yield sat at 2.01% down from 2.06% on Friday; mortgage prices were better at 900am, -6/32 (-.18 bps) after declining 13/32 (.41 bps) Friday.  The stock indexes at 900am were weaker.  Nothing specific so far this morning, just the usual backing and filling with no real changes.  At 930amthe DJIA opened -72, 10-Year Note was +17/32 at 2.01% (-5 bps) and mortgage prices were +5/32 (.15 bps).

The only scheduled data today comes at 200pm when the Treasury reports the November Budget Deficit at $139.5 billion, better than -$150.4 billion in October.  This week however has data; Treasury Auctions and the FOMC Meeting.  Maybe markets will concentrate on U.S. affairs rather than Europe.

 

This Week’s Economic Calendar:

11/12/11: 0200pm – November Treasury Budget (-139.5 billion)

11/13/11: 0830am – November Retail Sales (-.06%, excluding auto sales = -0.5%

1000am – October Business Inventories (-0.9%)

0100pm – $32 billion 3-Year Note Auction

0215pm – FOMC Policy Statement

11/14/11: 0700am – Weekly MBA mortgage Applications

0830am – November Import and Export Prices (N/A)

0100pm – $21 billion 10-Year Note Auction

11/15/11: 0830am – Weekly Jobless Claims (-9k to 390k)

- November Produce Price Index (PPI) (+0.1%, excluding food & energy = +0.1%)

- December N.Y. Empire State Manufacturing Index (3.0 from .061)

- Q3 Current Account Deficit (-$110 billion)

0915am – November Industrial Production (+0.2%)

- November Capacity Utilization (77.8% unchanged from October)

1000am – Philadelphia Fed Business Index (4.5 from 3.6)

0100pm – $13 billion 30-Year Bond Auction

11/16/11: 0830am – New Consumer Price Index (+0.1%, excluding food & energy +0.1%)

The 10-Year Note is back to 2.00% this morning,at the lower end of its month-long range; of course to have the 10-Year Note better the stock market must be weaker, and it is this morning.  There is no actual movement in the rate markets and it is likely to stay that way with no accomplishments from the E.U. summit meeting last week.  The E.U.’s path now is on fiscal controls of all the E.U. members; cutting expenses and increasing revenues (taxes).  Getting 27 members of the E.U. and 17 members using the euro currency to agree on budgets isn’t likely to achieve much success, however it is diffucult to imaging getting all of the sovereigns to agree other than on principle.  Europe sliding into another recession while Germany and France call the shots.

 

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Friday, December 9, 2011

Market Updates for Friday 12-09-2011

The EU summit meeting was an all-nighterand the result seems to be so-so.  The summit ended with optimism that the Union was moving closer to “fiscal union”, whatever that actually means.  The region’s leaders boosted a rescue fund and tightened budget rules to counter the debt crisis.  European Central Bank President Mario Draghi declared the results of the EU talks as “a very good outcome”, a day after he damped expectations that such a deal would prompt the ECB to step up its bond-buying operations.  This morning the ECB was said to buy Spanish and Portuguese government bonds.  The ECB is focused on reviving bank lending and yesterday cut intereest rates, offered banks unlimited cash for three years and loosened collateral rules for loans.  The summit added 200 billion euros ($267 billion) to their crisis-fighting capacity and toughened anti-deficit rules.

A huge amount of debt held by Europe’s banks is coming due in the first six months of 2012;1.1 trillion euros of long-term amd short-term debt in 2012, with about 519 billion euros of Italian, French and German debt maturing in the first half.  European banks have about $665 billion of debt coming due in the first six months.  The summit yesterday has taken near term concerns of a bank failure in Europe off the radar for the time being but as has been the case for two years, the meeting while considered a success, actually didn’t change much.  More talk ending in another round of optimism will likely in the end be another disappointment.  Interest rates in Italy and Spain increased today even as the ECB was said to be buying bonds.  Measuring the meeting from the perspective of investors so far, suggest it was only a baby step that isn’t likely to speed up the process of saving the EU; the U.S. bond market was unchanged this morning, stock indexes better after the DJIA fell 198 points yesterday.

Europe’s economic outlook is not good.  The regions economy isn’t likely to improve and more likely will worsen over the next year.  The debt problems are still so large that unless there is a huge infusion of cash to the debt ridden countries, debt defaults and potential bank failures are more likely than not. based on the current outlook.  Unless the IMF and the G-20 anti up, the ECB does not have the firepower to cover banks an debt defaults.  Meanwhile, Germany continues to resist most attempts to increase available funds until there is a fiscal outline where countries submit to the EU the authority over their own fiscal measures, a most difficult measure to pull off.

At 930am the DJIA opened up +65, the10-Year Note was unchanged from yesterday and mortgage prices were down 2/32 (.06 bps).

Earlier this morning at 830am, the October U.S. Trade Deficit was at -43.5 billion, a little better than expected; no reaction in the markets.  At 955am, the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, expected at 65.1 from 64.1 increased to 67.7, the 12-month outlook at 64 from 52 and the expectations component 61.1 from 55.4.  The better sentiment added to the equity market imporvement this morning.

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Thursday, December 8, 2011

Market Update for Thursday 12-08-2011

U.S. interst rates remain in their tight trading ranges: the10-Year Note trades within a 4 basis point (bps) yield while mortgage prices are essentially unchanged now for over a month.  Up and down with no real change ahead of the EU summit tomorrow.  The summit isn’t likely  satisfy; likely some kind of framework that will fall apart or drag along for another six monthes; too many opinions among sovereign countries that differ from what Germany wants.  Germany holds the key to any program that may keep regional banks from financial stress and add releif to the debt ladened countries.  Some positive news however; Italian and Spanish bond rates have peeked recently and have declined somewhat.  More on anticipation that something will actually be accomplished than relief that the debt crisis is over.  If the summit tomorrow doesn’t end with progress thoserates will likely increase again.

The ECB lowered its rate by .25% to 1.00%; it was widely expected.  No noticible reaction in the markets; the second month in a row it lowered rates.  The ECB is looking into lowering collateral criteria to get banks lending again rather than the central bank buying government bonds.  The ECB’s priority appears to be to save banks rather than saving the debt ridden countries although banks and sovereign debt cannot be separated.

At 830am Weekly Jobless Claims were better than forecast.  Claims fell 23k to 381k, the lowest in nine months; continuing claims fell more than estimates to 3.583 million from 3.757 million last week, the lowest continuing claims cince September 2008.  The initial reaction pressured the rate markets and pushed stock indexes higher, however it didn’t last more than a few minutes.  At 830am the 10-Year Note yield jumped to 2.10%, by 850am back to 2.05% (+1 bp) from yesterday’s close; stock indexes reversed and were weaker at 900am.  MBS prices have been volatile; FNMA 3.5 Coupon at one juncture was up as much as 14/32 (.44 bps), FHLMC’s and GMNA’s prices were slightly weaker.  Not sure why but MBS’s are trading in wide swings.

At 930am the DJIA opened +45, the 10-Year Note was at 930am was -2/32 and mortgage prices were unchanged.

At 1000am October Wholesale Inventories, not much of a mover, increased 1.6% on forecasts of +0.3%.

With tomorrow’s EU summit meeting, markets will likely end the session with little changes.  Technically the bond and mortgage markets still hold slightly bullish biases; mostly throwing off neutral readings.  The key 10-Year Note is comfortable between 2.00% and 2.12%.  Lower interst rates will be hard to achieve with the U.S. economy continuing to improve albeit at a slow pace.  Most of the economic reports in the past month have exceeded estimates, however unemployment remains high and the housing sector still mired in declining prices will restrain growth to a smail’s pace.

After flat trade most of the morning, mortgage prices at 930am were up 5/32 (.15 bps), unchanged.

 

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Market Updates for Wednesday 12-07-2011

In early trading this morning, the rate markets opened a little better while the stock indexes were generally unchanged.  All global markets await the EU summit meeting that begins late Thursday and into Friday.  News out of Europe this morning is one of caution with Germany saying not to expect any significant decisions that would end the debt mess.  While that isn’t unexpected, unless there is something positive markets can hang their hats on, disappointment will likely take stocks lower and add additional support in the bond and mortgagemarkets.

At 930am the DJIA opened down -50, the 10-Year Note was up +9/32 at 2.05% (-3 bps) and mortgage prices were up +6/32 (.18 bps).

Yesterday Tim Geithner was in the mix in Frankfurt; he backed a German-French push for closer European cooperation,urging policy makers to work with central banks to erect a “stronger firewall” to end the crisis.  He welcomed “progress toward a fiscal compact for the euro zone”.  The European Central Bank (EBC) will likely cut base lending rates tomorrow, the only question is by how much, normally central banks move in 25 bps increments.  The central bank is trying to encourage lending by banks in Europe; one thought being knocked around is the bank could lower collateral standards allowing banks to borrow more and for a longer period rather than purchasing more bonds.  Getting banks to lend more accomplishers what?  Nothing that deals with the sovereign debt problems.  The ECB has indicated it will act to prevent a credit shortage as this fall within its monetary policy remit.  At the end of the day and after the EU summit on Friday there won’t be anything that will please markets; after two years of constant anticipation, one meeting after another, they all ended with nothing of substance and more disappointment.  We bet it will be the same this go-round.

U.S. Treasuries are better this morning but in terms of direction the 10-Year Note and mortgage Backed Securities (MBS’s) are not moving and trading in well defined narrow ranges.  Point range for the last month for the 10-Year Note was 2.12% to 1.90% and MBS’s moved in a 50 bps range.  The equity markets also are not trending with wide swings up and down on the indexes but at the end of the day, no direction.  For all the talk from traders and stock market touters there is about as much confidecne behind their opinions that can be put in a thimble.  Europe is a politcal disaster; the idea for the EU in the 90′s has turned sour.  The first crisis since 1999 clearly demonstrates a combnination of sovereign countries doesn’t work as well s most thought when the EU was formed.

mortgage application volume in the December 2 week bounced right back following the lull of the Thanksgiving week, up a weekly 8.3% for purchase applications and up 15.3% for reFinancing applications.  Purchase applications have been treding higher which is a positive signal for home sales.  Low rates are lifting demand for mortgages with the aaverage 30-Year FHA loan down 2 bls to 3.98%.  Conforming 30-Year Fixedloans ($417,500 or less) averaged 4.18%, down 3 bps, with jumbo loans (over $417,500) also down 3 bps to 4.52%.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Foreclosure inventory sets record high

A new analysis suggests that the tide of home foreclosures isn’t going to recede soon.  The report from the Center for Responsible Lending, “Lost Ground, 2011,” finds that at least 2.7 million mortgages loaned from 2004 through 2008, or about 6%, have ended in foreclosure and that nearly 4 million more home loans (roughly 8%) from the same period remain at serious risk.  Put another way, “The nation is not even halfway through the foreclosure crisis,” says the report, which analyzed 27 million mortgages
made over the five years.  Across the country, low- and moderate-income neighborhoods and neighborhoods with high concentrations of minorities have been hit especially hard, the report found.  The report also noted that certain types of loans have much higher rates of completed foreclosures and serious delinquencies. They include loans originated by brokers; hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages, option ARMs, loans with prepayment penalties and loans with high interest rates (subprime). African Americans and Latinos were more likely to receive a high-cost mortgage with risky features, regardless of their credit. For example, among borrowers with good credit (a FICO score of over 660), African-Americans and Latinos received a high-interest-rate loan more than three times as often as white borrowers.

Delinquencies down, foreclosure inventory sets record high

The October mortgage Monitor report released by lender Processing Services, Inc. (LPS) shows mortgagedelinquencies continue their decline, now nearly 30% off their January 2010 peak. Meanwhile,
foreclosure inventories are on the rise, reaching an all-time high at the end of October of 4.29% of all activemortgages. The average days delinquent for loans in foreclosure extended as well, setting a new record of 631 days since last payment, while the average days delinquent for loans 90 or more days past due but not yet in foreclosure decreased for the second consecutive month.  Judicial vs. non-judicial foreclosure processes remain a significant factor in the reduction of foreclosure pipelines from
state to state, with non-judicial foreclosure inventory percentages less than half that of judicial states.

This is largely a result of the fact that foreclosure sale rates in non-judicial states have been proceeding at four to five times that of judicial. Non -judicial foreclosure states made up the entirety of the top 10 states with the largest year-over-year decline in non-current loans percentages.  The October data also
showed that mortgage originations are on the rise, reaching levels not seen since mid-2010. mortgageprepayment rates have also spiked, as much of the new origination is related to borrower refinancing; loans originated in 2009 and later are the primary drivers of the increase. While FHA origination activity
is down, GSE and FHA originations still account for the vast majority of all new loans – nearly nine out of every 10 new mortgages.

Jobs up, looks better than it is

Job creation remained weak in the US during November, with just 120,000 new positions created, though the unemployment rate slid to 8.6%, a government report showed Friday.  The rate fell from
the previous month’s 9.0%, a move which in part reflected a drop in those looking for jobs. The participation rate dropped to 64%, from 64.2% in October, representing 315,000 fewer job-seekers.
The actual employment level increased by 278,000. The total amount of those without a job fell to 13.3 million.  The drop in participation rate is significant in that had the labor force remained steady, the jobless rate would have dropped to 8.8%, according to Citigroup calculations. If the labor force had
followed trend growth, unemployment would be at 8.9%.  “Overall, the continued modest employment gains reflect an economy that plods along at an uninspiring pace,” Kathy Bostjancic, director
of macroeconomic analysis at The Conference Board, said in a statement. “These modest job gains are still not enough to propel economic growth to a sustainable 2%-plus growth path.”  The
measure some refer to as the “real” unemployment rate, which counts discouraged workers, also took a fall to 15.6% from 16.2%,its lowest level since March 2009.

However, economists were treating the rate drops with skepticism.  ”When the unemployment rate declines, we want to see both employment and participation increase as discouraged workers
return to the labor force. Today, we got the former, but not the latter, making the 0.4% drop look a bit suspect,” Neil Dutta, US economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, told clients. “We would not be surprised to see the unemployment rate give back some of its decline in the coming month(s).”  Average earnings were essentially flat, up two cents to $23.18 an hour. Private payrolls increased 140,000, considerably less than a report earlier this week showing that nongovernment jobs were up by more
than 200,000 for the month.  Government payrolls fell 20,000, including a 4,000 drop in federal positions.

Long-term unemployment remains a big problem: The average duration for joblessness surged to a record-high 40.9 weeks.   Stagnation in wages also continues, as more employed workers took
on second jobs. There were just under seven million multiple job-holders for the month, the highest total in 2011 and the most since May 2010.  Traders offered little reaction to the report.
Futures already had been indicating a positive open but lost some ground in the ensuing minutes after the Labor Department report hit the tape.  “At this pace of job growth, it will be more than two decades before we get back down to the pre-recession unemployment rate. Moreover, a shrinking labor force is not the way we want to see unemployment drop,” said Heidi Shierholz, economist at the Economic Policy Institute. “At this rate of growth we are looking at a long, long schlep before our sick
labor market recovers.”

Remember:
All these scary reports create opportunities for the investor no matter where you live.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Market Update for Monday 12-05-2011

his week will continue to be on what happens in Europe with the debt issues.  It is not going to fall off the front page for our markets for many months; on Friday the leaders in Europe are schedoed to meet.  Markets are hoping there will be some kind of plan that emerges to deal with the debts of Spain and Italy but after two years of trying it is a leap of faith to expect anything substantive coming from the meeting.  Not much in the way of key economic reading this week; Monday the November ISM Index and Weekly Jobless Claims on Friday are the only serious data points

This morning Europe and U.S. Stock markets are trading better;the U.S. bond and mortgage markets are weaker.  At 900am the 10-Year Note was -20/32 at 2.10% and mortgage prices were -6/32 (-.18 bps).  News out of Europe contunues to be indecisive with the summit meeting on Friday of Europes’ leaders.  Germany’s Merkel is due to meet with French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris today to prepare for a December 9th European summit.  According to news early this morning the German government won’t stand in the way of Bundesbank help to fight the debt crisis by means of loans channeled throught the International Monetay Fund (IMF).  Starting the week there is increased optimism in markets that Eruope will actually work out something positivve to fend off defaults in Spain and Italy.  Tim Geithner is in Europe cajoling leaders to come up with a plan quickly; hard to handicap his influence.  If there is acutally something of substance from the EU this week or over next weekend, U.S. interest rates will increase; no more safety moves into treasuries and the view that a plan in Europe will improve its and the U.S. economic outlook.

At 930am the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) opened up -100, the 10-Year Note was -20/32 at 2.10% (-7 bps) and mortgage prices were -6/32 (.18 bps) from Friday’s close.

Two economic reports at 1000am; November ISM Index expected at 53.4 from 52.9 was weaker at 52.0; New Orders component at 53.0 from 52.4; Employment were 48.9 from 53.3 and Prices Paid were 62.5 from 57.1.  A little improvement in the bond market on the weaker data but not much; the stock market didn’t react much to the report.  The employment component fell under 50; an indication of contraction.  Also at 1000am October Factory Orders, expected down 0.4% hit right on at -0.4%; October Durable Goods Orders originally reported down 0.7% were revised to 0.05%.

Technically and fundamentally the U.S. interest rate markets remain in narrow trading ranges; the 10-Year Note still unable to hold under 2.00% but does find support anytime the yield climbs to 2.12% as it did last week. mortgage rates and prices trading in even narrower ranges; the price on the 3.5 FNMA Coupon has held in a 50 basis point (bps) range now for almost a month.  The week will continue to work off equity markets; stock indexes higher, bond and mortgages prices lower.  We remain skeptical that U.S. interest rates will decline much from these levels.  The larger outlook is that rates will begin to slowly increase from present levels.

For all your real estate and mortgage lending needs please visit www.crestico.com 

Friday, December 2, 2011

Market Update for Friday 12-02-2011

November Employment report at 830am was generally in line with estimates.  Today’s news will feature the unemployment rate dropp to 8.6% from 9.0%; non-farm hobs increased 120k while private non-farm jobs increased 140k, average hourly earnings are +0.1%.  The unemployment rate is the lowest since March 2009 but there is a hitch to the headline; the labor participation rate declined to 64.0% from 64.2% implying that more poential workers have stopped looking for a job.  The decrease in the jobless rate refelcted a 278k gain in emlployment at the same time 315k Americans left the labor force.  Revisions to September and October added 72k more jobs than originally reported.  The U-6 underemployment rate declined from 16.2% to 15.6%.  It included part-time workers who’d prefer a full-time position and people who want work but have given up looking.

That non-farm jobs increased 120k reflects many jobs are temporary hirings for the holidays, the reaction in the bond and mortgage markets wasn’t much change from yesterday’s closes although slightly lower as traders dicsount the decline in the unemployment rate and job growth was fractionally lower than general estimates.  The stock indexes were trading better prior to 830am on the back of continued improvement Europe’s equity markets; there was little change in the indexes following the report.

In Europe there is some increased optimism that the debt crisis may be helped by the ECB funneling funds to the IMFthen the IMF leverages the funds and provides funds to Italy and Spain taking them back from the abyss.  Next Friday Europe’s leaders will meet in a summit in Brussels, the meeting must end with something more than what the world has had to swallow for two years…a lot of talk but little action.  Given the improvement in Europe’s equity markets this week and the best week for Italy’s and Spain’s 2-Year Note yields this week, optimism is increasing.

At930am the DJIA opened 90 pponts better, the 10-Year Note was -9.32 at 2.12%, a near term support level and mortgage prices fell off ust 4/32 (.12 bps).

So far today the Employment Report has had little impact on the U.S. Financial markets.  The bellwether 10-Year Note has near-term support at 2.12% that hs been tested a few times and held.  At 1000am it traded at 2.11% after ending yesterday at 2.10% after moving to 2.14% in intraday trading.  mortgages have been held captive in a 50 basis points (bps) price range for three weeks now while the 10-Year Note volatility swings its yields from 2.12% to 1.86% on every sentence out of the mouths of Europe’s leaders.

We haven’t changed our outlook that the U.S. interest rate markets are unlikely to decline much from the present levels and have more potential to rise from that decline.  While Europe’s mess will take years to resolve the markets now are believing that a plan will surface soon that will remove much of concern that Europe’s banks would fail.  Over the last couple of weeks the safety moves into U.S. treasuries has ebbed substantially.  We can argue that the U.S. economy won’t improve much based on the housing market and the high level of unemployment, however trading in the equity markets implies investors are increasingly more optimistic about the future.  Either way one must see the reality that no one is sure; this has lead to huge swings in the indexes and contributed to keeping interest rates from falling futher.

For all your real estate and mortgage lending needs please visit www.crestico.com