Mortgage Rates Steady - Fed Likely to Increase Rates in September
Mortgage rates are steady this morning, but was
anticipating some positive movement after yesterday’s rally. The MBS market improved by +5BPS yesterday,
but was not enough to improve mortgage rates or fees.
Existing-home sales rose 1.1% to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of 5.57 million in June, the National Association of Realtors said
Thursday. That was 3% higher than a year ago and the strongest since February
2007. First-timers made up 33% of all purchases, the most in four years, while
the share of investor purchases declined to 11%, the lowest since July 2009.
Supply was 5.8% lower than a year ago, the 13th consecutive month of yearly
declines.
The FOMC meeting next week is likely to show more
confidence within the Fed that a rate increase will happen, likely in September.
The economy has improved and the Fed wants so badly to make another increase
that we doubt now that the Fed will miss again as it has a couple of times in
the last 18 months. There were two opportunities in the past, mid-2015 and late
2014. The economic data was improving but the Fed took a pass, since those
misses still resonate it is likely with the better economic outlook now and the
recent rise in the equity market the Fed will have another chance in September.
How will the FMC policy statement frame it? Data dependent passes muster now,
and employment continues to improve and investors and markets have pushed aside
the UK exit. September is a window - will the Fed open it? No inflation on the
horizon may keep the Fed with its hands in its pockets - a Federal Reserve
measure of expected price gains touched the lowest since at least 1999 this
month.
According to Sigma Research: "Six days and
counting; the 10yr note yield has tested its technical support at 1.60% every
day since last Friday and is doing it again today. Selling has ebbed but
equally investors still enamored with better returns in the equity market.
Today is likely to be another quiet session ahead of the weekend and next
week’s FOMC meeting. NO rate increase next week and the September meeting is
trading only a 20% chance based on FF futures markets."
While floating has not hurt or benefited anyone that
much this week, I suggest that you still remain cautious and keep your eye on
the 10yr, which is at 1.57% at 11:00AM.
I doubt that prices will decline, but I cannot predict the future with
everything that is now affecting the markets.
Comments
Post a Comment