A place where economics, financial markets, and real estate intersect.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Morning Report - Pending Home Sales hits a 9 year high.

Vital Statistics:

Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  2117.1 -3.8 -0.18%
Eurostoxx Index 3658.5 -24.3 -0.66%
Oil (WTI) 57.02 -0.5 -0.85%
LIBOR 0.286 0.001 0.47%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 97.43 0.062 0.06%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 2.14% 0.01%  
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA 102.2 0.1
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA 101.1 0.0
BankRate 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage 3.94

Stocks are lower this morning on overseas weakness. Bonds and MBS are flat.

Pending Home Sales rose 3.4% in April, and reached their highest level in 9 years, according to the NAR. Good news for originators focused on the purchase business. After a weak start to the year, sales in the Northeast and the Midwest picked up smartly. Sales in the West were almost flat. NAR expects to see existing home sales come in at 5.24 million in 2015, and the median house price to rise 6.7%. This is ALL inventory-driven, and these increases are vulnerable if wage inflation doesn't pick up soon. The ratio of the median house price to median income has topped 4x and is already well above its historical norm of 3.15x - 3.55x. At the height of the bubble, the ratio hit 4.8x. 



Initial Jobless Claims came in at 282k, the 12th straight week below 300k. A 300k level in initial jobless claims is usually associated with strong economies. People who have jobs are definitely not losing them, however the long-term unemployed and the involuntarily employed part-time are still trying to return. I still think you won't see meaningful moves out of the Fed until we start seeing wage inflation, and that has been slow to materialize.

The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index fell to 40.9 from 42.4 in the prior week. This is a 5 month low. The view of the state of the economy has fallen markedly over the past 5 weeks, however people's personal financial situation has not changed. Consumers are still more reluctant to spend money, which is a result of their perception of the economy. Note that we will get the second revision to GDP tomorrow, and the Street is forecasting that Q1 GDP contracted by 0.8%. 

Debt talks with Greece appear to be going nowhere still. The ECB is worried about contagion if a deal is not reached quickly. “In the absence of a quick agreement on structural implementation needs, the risk of an upward adjustment of the risk premia demanded on vulnerable euro-area sovereigns could materialize,” the ECB said in its twice-yearly Financial Stability Review published Thursday in Frankfurt. What this means is that you could see the yields on the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain) go one direction, while yields on Northern European debt move the other way. That said, you have to put this in perspective. The US 10-year yields 2.14% and the dollar is strengthening. The Italian 10 year yields 1.85%. Spain yields 1.82%. Ireland 1.2%, Portugal 2.52%. All in the context of Euro weakness. The yields on PIIGS debt is being artificially held down by central bank activity, and the fear is that they could begin to reflect economic reality. 


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