Mortgage Rates Remain Under Pressure; More Volatility Ahead RocketNews
Post on: 23 Июнь, 2015 No Comment
Mortgage rates moved convincingly higher for the second straight day, bringing them back near the highest levels of 2015. Rates are dictated primarily by bond market trading, and traders are currently in a defensive stance ahead of the weeks most significant events beginning tomorrow. Defensive in this context, means more willing to sell than to buy. Increased selling pressure causes prices to fall for the mortgage-backed securities that lenders rely on to generate rate sheets. The lower those prices, the worse rate sheets look for consumers.
Over the past two days, that defensiveness in the bond market has been exacerbated by some of the housekeeping-type trading associated with big corporate bond issuance. This is a bit of an esoteric concept when it comes to connecting it to mortgage rates, but whats important to understand is that unexpectedly large, new corporate bond issuance indirectly hurts rates as well. The net effect is a firm move to 3.875% as the most prevalent conventional 30yr rate for top tier borrowers, up from 3.75% last week.
The next three days bring events with even more power to shake things up. ADPs employment report will kick off this volatile little gauntlet early tomorrow morningwell before lenders put out their first rate sheets of the day. While its certainly not unfair to hope that there is more life left in the long term rate rally, it is certainly unwise to bet on it in the short term. That means you could end up in the frustrating position of having locked your loan only to see rates improve. The trade-off is that if rates rise by as much as they could in this environment, NOT locking would result in feelings much worse than mere frustration.
Loan Originator Perspective
The next few days are likely to be very volatile culminating with the
jobs report on Friday. Tomorrow we get the ADP report which can move
the markets if it is far off from expectations. I think the markets are
waiting to see what Friday brings and not just with the number of jobs
created, but the income component might be of more importance. The Fed
has stated many times, they are waiting for inflation to pick up before
starting the tightening cycle and wage inflation is one of the biggest
drivers of overall inflation. Last months NFP report showed a month
over month increase of .5% which was much higher than estimated. This
month economists expect a .2% increase. A smaller increase would be
good for rates, but a higher increase could very well break bonds out of
the recent range to the wrong side for those floating. I think you can
be safe floating overnight, but if you plan to lock before NFP I would
strongly recommend you do so by end of day tomorrow. -Victor Burek, Open Mortgage
Mortgage Rates began the day in the same territory as yesterday, but came under
pressure in the afternoon. This validates my ongoing guidance for the week: if you cannot risk rates worsening, you
should lock. Rates are sitting at the high end of the range, and if
the next few days worth of data are not friendly the next move could be
higher, quickly. Prepare for the worst, and hope for the best. -Brent Borcherding, brentborcherding.com
It is getting harder and harder to stomach this bond market. Just when
you think things are turning a corner they dont. That has been the
story for sometime now. Tomorrows ADP data and more importantly Fridays
Jobs report may be the game changer. Being that we have given up so
much and are near solid support I would float into tomorrows ADP report. -Manny Gomes, Branch Manager Norcom Mortgage
Todays Best-Execution Rates
- 30YR FIXED — 3.875
Ongoing Lock/Float Considerations
- 2015 began with a strong move to the lowest rates seen since May 2013. The catalyst has been and continues to be Europe.
- Its impossible to know when Europe will turn a corner, and even then its only the sort of thing well be able to observe in hindsight. That means every head-fake toward higher rates runs the risk of developing into a longer term rise, even if those risks vary greatly in terms of probability. Clients with longer term time horizons and who otherwise dont mind losing some ground in exchange for the chance at locking even lower rates are the only ones who should float. Clients who must close by a certain date or who cant afford to lose any ground on rates should generally be locking even though the longer term trend has been in their favor for over a year now.
- As always, please keep in mind that the rates discussed generally refer to what weve termed best-execution (that is, the most frequently quoted, conforming, 30yr fixed rate for top tier borrowers, based not only on the outright price, but also bang-for-the-buck. Generally speaking, our best-execution rate tends to connote no origination or discount pointsthough this can varyand tends to predict Freddie Macs weekly survey with high accuracy. Its safe to assume that our best-ex rate is the more timely and accurate of the two due to Freddies once-a-week polling method).