Last | Change | |
S&P Futures | 2286.0 | -5.0 |
Eurostoxx Index | 362.3 | -1.8 |
Oil (WTI) | 53.7 | -0.2 |
US dollar index | 90.6 | 0.2 |
10 Year Govt Bond Yield | 2.42% | |
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA | 102.1 | |
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA | 103.2 | |
30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage | 4.19 |
Stocks are lower this morning as credit spreads widen in Europe. Bonds and MBS are up.
The week after the jobs report is usually data-light and this week is no exception. We have no data this morning, and about the only report of consequence is the JOLTs job opening report tomorrow. All eyes will be on the quits rate, which has been pretty steady. An increase would signal wage inflation ahead.
Goldman strategists are beginning to re-think their initial bullishness on the Trump administration. Instead of tackling things like tax reform, he is spending his energy on immigration and trade. There is a realization that gridlock is going to be the norm for the next two years, and that means no big, sweeping changes. Regulatory relief is still possible, but bureaucrats seem to be preparing to push back against major changes in direction. So the "Trump effect" could end up being a lot smaller than investors (and the Fed) were thinking a month ago. Which means the Fed has more room to be cautious.
MBS investors are beginning to worry about what happens to MBS when the Fed stops re-investing maturing proceeds from its QE portfolio. After all, the Fed has been the biggest buyer of MBS paper. Will the lower demand for mortgage backed securities translate into higher mortgage rates, even if the 10 year goes nowhere? It is possible, however take a look at the chart below: I plotted the 10 year yield and the 30 year mortgage rate, with the difference between the two (the spread) below. The two blue shaded regions were QE1, 2 and 3. The green line didn't really move all that much during QE. MBS spreads are about where they were prior to QE. Since the Fed isn't entertaining selling bonds, just not buying them anymore, the pre-QE level of something like 167 basis points is about right. Right now, the spread is 177 basis points, which probably represents some of the lag you see in mortgage rates versus Treasuries. My point is that MBS spreads vary over time, but they have historically been around these levels. I can't see MBS spreads making or breaking a homebuying decision. They just aren't that significant.
On Friday, Donald Trump signed an executive order which directed a review of Dodd-Frank. There were the expected breathless headlines in the business press (with a stroke of a pen, Donald Trump eliminates Dodd-Frank, he's "gutting" Dodd-Frank), however this is just a "review and report back to me" order. A full repeal of Dodd-Frank would be impossible, and probably would not be supported by the industry: after all, they have spent the past 6 years getting compliant with D-F and the last thing they want to do is have to adopt some new system. The unintended consequences will be addressed, but the structure will probably remain in place. These will turn out to be addressing the CFPB and small banking regulation in order to get credit flowing for smaller borrowers, addressing the Volcker rule to encourage market making, and the fiduciary rule, which many financial advisors interpret as a gag order and a limitation of the investment options menu. What does this mean for the mortgage business? Probably not much, although the biggest potential is in an easing of CFPB enforcement and an increase in mortgage products as the private label securitization market returns.
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