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Monday, January 9, 2017

Morning Report: FHA annual premiums drop

Vital Statistics:

Last Change
S&P Futures  2268.5 -3.0
Eurostoxx Index 263.4 -2.0
Oil (WTI) 52.9 -1.1
US dollar index 92.8 0.0
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 2.37%
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA 103
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA 104
30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage 4.11

Stocks are lower this morning on overseas worries. Bonds and MBS are up.

The week after the jobs report is typically data-light, however we will have a lot of Fed-speak this week, especially today, Thursday, and Friday. 

The labor market conditions index slipped in December to -.3 from 1.2 in November. Note this is a meta-index of many leading and lagging indicators, so it is possible to have a so-so number just after a decent jobs report.

HUD announced they are cutting the annual insurance premium for most FHA loans by 25 basis points, which should save the typical homeowner about $500 annually. This will affect mortgages with a disbursement date after Jan 27. The reduction is due to the improving health of the housing market and the FHA's insurance fund. Since the crisis, FHA has increased premiums by 150% to restore capital reserves. This reduction reverses that move and brings annual premiums back down to close to pre-crisis levels. 

The current HUD Chairman, Julian Castro is worried that Ben Carson will roll back some of the HUD initiatives over the past several years. The one most likely to be on the chopping block is a controversial policy in which HUD sues local governments in order to force them to change their zoning laws in order to accommodate more multi-family housing. Westchester County in New York has been fighting this for the entire Obama administration. 

Notwithstanding the jump in wage inflation last month, overall wage inflation has been hard to come by, not only in the US, but globally. The relationship between unemployment and wages seems to have broken down. What is going on? First, the most likely explanation is that the new jobs being created pay less than the jobs that were lost. This is the most plausible explanation, as many of the construction jobs that were lost in the bubble never came back, and most of the employment growth is coming in lower-paying health care jobs. Second, workers lost so much bargaining power in the recession that they don't feel comfortable asking for more. A third explanation could be that the cost to employers has risen, but these costs are largely regulatory and don't flow through to wages. Regardless of the reason, wage growth is an imperfect representation of labor market strength. 

Now that it is becoming harder to find buildable lots, many homebuilders are returning to half-finished subdivisions that were abandoned as the housing bubble burst in 2007 and 2008. The supply of developed vacant lots (go-dirt) has fallen by 20% since 2011. The buyers seem to be the big national homebuilders like Lennar. The credit markets for homebuilders remains a case of "haves and have-nots." The big builders are able to issue corporate debt at super-low interest rates while the small guys are getting turned down by the local bank. 

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