A place where economics, financial markets, and real estate intersect.
Showing posts with label subprime auto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label subprime auto. Show all posts

Monday, April 9, 2018

Morning Report: Corporate credit spreads are widening

Vital Statistics:

Last Change
S&P futures 2621 15.3
Eurostoxx index 375.48 0.66
Oil (WTI) 62.54 0.48
10 Year Government Bond Yield 2.79%
30 Year fixed rate mortgage 4.43%

Stocks are up to start the week after a pretty lousy session on Friday. Bonds and MBS are flat.

The week after the jobs report is usually pretty data-light, however we will get the Producer Price Index and the Consumer Price Index on Tuesday and Wednesday. 

Friday's jobs report should allay investor fears that the Fed is behind the curve, at least according to PIMCO's Mohammed El-Arian. The light payroll number was probably weather-driven and the 3 month average is around 200k, which is solid and respectable. Wage growth came in as expected. Investors should take comfort that the Fed is probably not at risk of making a policy mistake due to an overheating economy. His view is that there is a 65 / 35 percent chance the Fed will stick the landing, meaning that economic growth will continue to more broadly expand and that markets will adapt to the higher volatility associated with normal monetary policy.

An example of higher volatility: corporate bond spreads. The end of 2017 was characterized by extremely low volatility in the stock and bond markets. When volatility falls, risk premiums contract. We saw corporate credit spreads reach pre-crisis levels. Since the beginning of the year, they are back to widening. Bad news for corporate bond funds, which have been beset by widening spreads and higher rates. 



The story of the past couple of years has been "subprime auto." The chickens are coming home to roost on this trade, and we are starting to see some subprime auto finance companies go bankrupt. Indeed, when you talk about the effects of low volatility in the market, things like this come to mind. With rates being held down by Fed actions, investors inevitably reach for yield. For a while, you could get a lower rate on a 6 year auto loan than you could on a 30 year fixed rate mortgage. This is insane when you take into account that the value of the collateral underlying a mortgage is 90% sure to increase over time, while the value of the collateral underlying the car loan is 100% sure to depreciate over time. That said, this won't be a repeat of 2008 economically. 

Mortgage credit got tighter in March, according to the MBA's Mortgage Credit Availability Index. It was most pronounced in government lending, which could have been explained by some of the weakness and illiquidity we were seeing in the higher coupon Ginnie securities. Ginnie investors have been burned by higher prepay speeds and have been reluctant to buy the higher coupon securities. This makes the higher note rates (which is where the lower credit scores usually reside) cut off from the rest of the market. 



Thursday, December 21, 2017

Morning Report: House prices rise 6.6% YOY

Vital Statistics:

Last Change
S&P Futures  2687.0 5.5
Eurostoxx Index 388.8 0.4
Oil (WTI) 57.5 0.3
US dollar index 86.8 0.0
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 2.49%
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA 102.531
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA 103.375
30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage 3.88

Stocks are up this morning after tax reform is passed. Bonds and MBS are flat.

Hot on the heels of tax reform is legislation to keep the lights on. The House is set to vote on a stopgap measure to keep the government open for another month. This will prevent the Senate from attaching too many things to the bill. It also gives the government some breathing room after the new year to hash out a longer-term funding deal. 

In response to the tax cuts, 5 big corporations (Comcast, AT&T, Boeing, Fifth Third, and Wells Fargo) all announced they were either raising pay or paying bonuses to workers. Could this be the start of broader wage growth? 

House prices rose 0.5% in October, according to the FHFA House Price Index. September's 0.3% increase was revised upward to 0.5%. On a YOY basis, prices rose 6.6% nationally. The East South Central region (TN, KY, MI, and AL) rose 8.2%, which was a particular strong showing. As usual, the West and Mountain states led the charge, while the Upper Midwest and the East Coast brought up the rear.


The final revision for third quarter GDP came in at 3.2%. The prior estimate was 3.3% as consumer spending was revised down a tenth of a percent to 2.2%. The GDP price deflator was unchanged at 2.1%. 

In other economic data, Initial Jobless Claims rose to 245k last week, while the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index rose. The Chicago Fed National Activity Index gave back some of October's hurricane-related gains. The Index of Leading Economic Indicators rose 0.3%. Overall, all of these reports were strong readings and show the economy with some momentum heading into 2018. 

The chickens are coming home to roost for subprime auto lending. Some big private equity firms got into the business, hoping to generate huge returns from auto loans paying in the high single digits. Unfortunately, the default rates have soared for these loans, and auto sales have cooled off and they can't exit the business. No, it isn't a canary in the coal mine for the US economy as a whole. 

Realtor.com weighs in on the hottest and coldest real estate markets of 2017. In the top 20, the hottest are unsurprising - the Bay Area. However there are a few surprises, like Detroit, Fort Wayne, and Stockton.

This reminds me of the late 90s, when companies discovered you could get a multiple by adding .com to your corporate moniker. Long Island Iced Tea company jumps fivefold after renaming itself Long Blockchain and committing to looking for a way to make money in blockchain and fintech. Not that they have any business in it, or expertise, but they will look into the idea. 

Monday, March 21, 2016

Morning Report: Existing Home Sales fall again

Vital Statistics:

LastChangePercent
S&P Futures 2046.1-4.2-0.21%
Eurostoxx Index3016.5-45.5-1.49%
Oil (WTI)39.010.51.43%
LIBOR0.6420.0020.38%
US Dollar Index (DXY)95.03-0.860-0.90%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield1.91%0.02%
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA105.4
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA104.5
BankRate 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage3.71

Markets are lower this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are down.

Existing home sales fell 7.1% in February to an annualized pace of 5.08 million. Bad weather in the Northeast and the Midwest may have played a part. Sales are up 2.2% on a year-over-year basis. Lack of inventory and affordability remain the biggest issues. The median home price increased 4.4% to $210,800, and total inventory is about 4.4 month's worth. All cash transactions were 25% of sales and investor purchases ticked up to 19%. The share of first time homebuyers slipped to 30% as affordability problems and worries about the economy kept many younger buyers on the sidelines. 

Given the tight inventory, why aren't homebuilders aggressively adding supply? Finding affordable land plots and skilled labor appear to be the problem. It is amazing that 10 years after the housing bust, we are still 25% below the long-term average in housing starts. I adjusted housing starts by population, and the graph below gives you an ideal of how much we have underbuilt. We still just barely reached the low of the 81-82 recession, which was the nastiest since the Great Depression. What is going on? My guess is that the government is the problem, via zoning laws in some localities, and general Washingtonian regulatory funk tying up the credit markets. Correcting whatever problem is holding back housing is the difference between a tepid, meh economy of 2% growth, and a recovery where we see 3% growth and wage inflation. It would be nice if someone running for office noticed this and said something. Unfortunately, they only acceptable answer these days is that the financial sector isn't regulated and needs to be sat on more. 




Investor demand for paper isn't necessarily the issue either, as right now anyone who can fog a mirror can get an auto loan. It is the same old story: new entrants come into the market, take risks that the established players won't take, and a new market takes off. One thing that is different these days is technology. Lower credit borrowers will get a GPS installed on their car (no, not a nice navigation system, but a transmitter that tells the lender where the car is). Lenders also now have the ability to disable the car remotely. 

The Chicago Fed National Activity index reverted to negative territory last month to -.29 from a upward-revised .41. The 3 month moving average is negative, indicating the economy is growing slightly below trend.