It’s Not What They Do, It’s What They Say

It’s all eyes on the Fed today as the market sits patiently, waiting for the 2:15 P.M. EST press release. Despite strong 2006 Q4 growth figures and a five percent spike in oil prices yesterday, there is an eerie calm while markets wait for the FOMC’s press release.

In its December 2006 press release, the [...]

The Market Stops To Catch Its Breath

60 days ago, markets put a 36% probability that the Fed would lower the Fed Funds Rate by March 2007. Today, that probability is zero. If you’re wondering why mortgage rates have ascended so quickly, that’s part of your answer — inflation expectations are changing.

Rates increased again on Monday and today the market [...]

The Week In Review (January 29, 2007) : What To Watch For

After a week of bludgeoning in which mortgage rates rose as much as 0.50% on the heels of a supposed housing sector rebound, don’t expect the fireworks to stop anytime soon.

This Monday and Tuesday will be quiet with respect to economic releases, but Wednesday through Friday will be jammed-packed with mortgage-rate-moving data. The highlights include [...]

Has “Housing Stability” Become a “Housing Rebound”?

Mortgage bonds continue their slide after yesterday’s outright hysteria.

Today’s New Homes Sales showed a 4.8% jump in December to an annualized pace of 1.12 million homes. This is about 14% higher than July’s pace and some economists are wondering if "housing stability" just turned into "housing rebound". Home supply plummeted from 7.2 [...]

Existing Home Sales Data is Weak, But Traders Find Strength

Existing Home Sales showed weaker-than-expected numbers this morning, but that hasn’t stopped the slide in mortgage-backed securities. This is a counter-intuitive movement so let’s take a deeper look.

First, the supply of homes dropped from 7.3 months to 6.8 months. With less supply, there is a tendency for home values to stabilize and that [...]

The Market Sees What It Wants To See

With the Federal Open Market Committee scheduled to meet for two days beginning January 30, the Fed has entered "blackout mode" and no Fed speakers are slated for the next week. Combine Fed Silence with lack of economic data, and market are moving on emotion and gut feel.

That’s bad news for rate shoppers because [...]

Mortgage Insurance Is Tax Deductible in 2007, But With A Catch

Adding complexity to the home financing process, The Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 includes new tax code for homeowners. The act grants itemized deductions for private mortgage insurance (PMI) and government mortgage insurance (MIP) expense premiums paid in 2007.

For all loans originated in the 2007 calendar year, mortgage insurance is tax-deductible [...]

The Week In Review (January 22, 2007) : What To Watch For

Last week, economic data showed that the economy continues to grow at a healthy pace and that last year’s fears of an economic recession may have been overblown; wholesale and consumer prices were up 1.1% and 2.5% annually, respectively.

With no clear recessionary indicators present in the market, long-term mortgages such as the 30-year fixed [...]

The Irrelevance of The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey

Today’s University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment survey showed that Americans are feeling terrific about the state of the economy. The index jumped to 98.0 in January from last month’s 91.7 level.

On a broader level, this is not an important piece of data for mortgage markets. The idea is that a more confident consumer [...]

The Housing Engine That Won’t Slow Down

Housing Starts handily beat economists’ expectations this morning and CPI showed strength, too, sustaining the market momentum that has trended mortgage rates higher over the last 30 days.

The Federal Open Market Committee has repeatedly told us that it expects the economy to slow down in 2007, led by a weakening housing market. And yet, [...]