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

Friday, January 29, 2016

Morning Report: Bank of Japan to the rescue

Vital Statistics:

LastChangePercent
S&P Futures 1908.022.01.15%
Eurostoxx Index3024.680.72.74%
Oil (WTI)30.460.10.12%
LIBOR0.621-0.003-0.48%
US Dollar Index (DXY)99.340.2790.28%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield1.92%-0.05%
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA104.7
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA104
BankRate 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage3.71

Stocks and bonds are higher this morning after the Bank of Japan instituted negative interest rates in an attempt to improve their struggling economy and weaken the yen.

The Bank of Japan's move caused a worldwide bond rally, which has brought the US 10 year bond solidly below 2%. Mortgage bankers could catch a break here as refi activity will pick up.




We have a lot of economic data this morning

Fourth quarter GDP came in at an anemic 0.7%, missing the Street estimate of 0.8%. The only bright spot of the report was consumption, which increased 2.2%

Inflation remains well-contained with the PCE (the preferred inflation measure of the Fed) increasing at 0.8%, and the core index increasing at 1.2%

The Employment Cost Index rose at 0.6% as wage inflation remains nowhere to be found.

Consumer sentiment slipped in January, while the ISM Milwaukee and Chicago Purchasing Manager Indices increased. 

The homeownership rate increased by a tenth of a percent in the fourth quarter to 63.8%. It bottomed in the second quarter at 63.4%. Median asking rent increased 6% from the third quarter to $850. On an annualized basis, it increased 11%.

Household formation dropped to 460,000 in the fourth quarter from 1,447,300 in the third quarter. This almost looks like a data error. If household formation was slowing that much, you wouldn't see the tight inventory of housing that we have. 


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