Mortgage Rates Flat
Mortgage rates were again flat as it stayed in the
range it has been for over a month.
Today we had another FOMC minutes release, which by all accounts was another
nonevent. The minutes can be twisted anyway one wants to but the bottom line is
no increase in rates in September regardless of what Wm. Dudley commented on
Monday. That is not only what I believe but more importantly what the markets
believe.
On the release media went semi-postal as they usually
do with every kind of interpretation imaginable. All you need to know is the
markets did not react expect to improve a little after the minutes did not
change anyone’s belief. Still have some
that worry over a move next month but the proof of the pudding is in the
eating. The 10yr note and MBSs traded again in the same range.
The Federal Reserve and the other central banks have
backed themselves into a corner and have no idea how to get out of it. I cannot say it often enough, the Fed is
irrelevant now - way too many opinions that are finally gagging markets.
Whatever Fed officials and FOMC meetings have to offer it is best to simply
listen but then turn to the bond and currency markets market for what investors
and traders are actually believing.
As long as the 10yr is trapped holding rate locks does
not reward the risk. How long will this tight trading range will last is
difficult to forecast but I will say this, when it breaks it will be a swift
reaction in the direction of the breakout. The longer the 10yr stays within its
10BPS range the bigger the reaction when it breaks through.
In summary, with the Fed July Minutes out of the way
now I would be inclined to float my interest rate if my closing were beyond 30
days. However, I would make sure you're
ready to lock quickly if events move unfavorably. For locks of 30 days or less I would still be
inclined to lock what are still some of the lowest interest rates for mortgages
we've seen in our lifetimes. In the
current environment, it will be much easier for rates to move higher than it
will for them to go lower. Evaluate your
own risk tolerance of course.
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