
• Tuesday’s mortgage rates should be higher by approximately .125 of a discount point. The bond market is currently down 6/32 (4.40%).
• Stocks are showing early gains with the Dow up 20 points and the Nasdaq up 227 points.
• The Conference Board announced late this morning that their June Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) stood at 91.2. This was below expectations, but a sizable downward revision to May’s reading is skewing June’s change. May’s reading was revised from 93.1 to 90.6, meaning surveyed consumers felt less confident in their financial situations last month than previously thought.
• While June’s CCI reading is lower than expected, it was still an increase from May. The month over month increase is a sign that consumers are more likely to spend this month than they were last month. Since consumer spending makes up over two-thirds of the U.S. economy, we have to label the report as unfavorable for bonds and mortgage rates even though it didn’t come as surprise.
• Tomorrow brings us the release of two reports and some Fed talk, starting with June's ADP Employment report at 8:15 AM ET. This report predicts changes in private-sector jobs, using the company's clients that use them for payroll processing as a base. It is expected to show approximately 115,000 private sector jobs were added during the month. Bond traders would prefer to see a much smaller number.
• Fed Chairman Warsh will be participating in a discussion at a European Central Bank forum in Portugal tomorrow. The topic of the discussion is related to monetary policy, so we could hear something that the markets find highly relevant and react accordingly. The event is scheduled to start at 9:00 AM ET, meaning we will know if there is a reaction by the time tomorrow’s commentary report is posted.
• June's manufacturing index from the Institute of Supply Management (ISM) will be tomorrow’s second release. This index measures manufacturer sentiment by surveying trade executives on current business conditions. May's reading that was posted last month came in at 54.0. Market participants are expecting a reading of 53.8, indicating slightly softer activity in the manufacturing sector. Good news for the bond market and mortgage rates would be a noticeably lower reading.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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