A nice rebound yesterday; the MBS market recovered
slightly over half the price declines last Friday on the June employment
report. This morning markets opened about unchanged in the bond and mortgage
markets with US stock indexes up again in pre-market trading. Today there are
no economic releases to think about; at 1:00 Treasury will begin this week’s
borrowing with $32B of 3 yr. notes. Recent Treasury auctions have seen less
demand than the averages, with interest rate higher we will focus attention on
the demand. Treasury three-year notes yield more than double their levels in
May before the U.S. sells today. 3 yr notes generally don’t fit in our wheel
house, we are more interested in tomorrow’s $21B 10 yr auction.
Today should be rather quiet compared the last couple of sessions. There
are no data points, and tomorrow the Fed will release the minutes from the 6/19
FMC meeting, always something to consider. While important, it isn’t as
important as Bernanke’s speech tomorrow afternoon. After his comments about the
Fed thinking about tapering led to interest rates spiking higher on 6/19 (since
then the 10 yr note rate has increased from 2.17% to 2.64% at yesterday’s close
and mortgage rates up 0.50%), he may try to ease the fears now dominating the
bond and mortgage markets. Can he do it?
At 9:30 the DJIA opened +68, NASDAQ +14, S&P +9; 10 yr note unchanged
at 2.64% but MBS prices up 15 bps frm yesterday’s close.
Technically the bond and mortgage markets continue bearish; a nice
bounce yesterday and so far this morning but everything is still pointing to
higher rates and lower prices. As long as the US equity markets continue to
attract investors there is very little reason for investors to move back into treasuries.
The Fed fueled the most recent rally when the FOMC provided a positive outlook
for economic growth and Bernanke said the Fed was considering winding down its
market support. Our advice remains the same it has been for two months now;
don’t fight the tape, those that ignore price action will continue to pay the
price. Use any improvements as opportunities. Forget those low rates, they are
gone and not very likely to fall much frm current levels.
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