
• Thursday’s mortgage rates should be higher by approximately .125 - .250 of a discount point. The bond market is currently down 8/32 (4.09%).
• Stocks are fairly calm but mixed with the Dow up 34 points and the Nasdaq down 26 points.
• Last week’s unemployment figures were this morning’s only relevant economic data. They revealed only 191,000 new people filed for jobless benefits, falling well short of the 225,000 that was expected. This was the lowest number since 2022, giving us a sign of strength in the employment sector. Accordingly, the data is bad news for bonds and mortgage rates.
• Tomorrow brings us some data that is traditionally very important to the financial and mortgage markets but is aged now because the government shutdown delayed its release. We are still expecting it to draw a relatively strong reaction, especially if it shows a noticeable variance from forecasts since this is the last major economic release before next week’s much-debated FOMC meeting.
• The 8:30 AM ET report title is September’s Personal Income and Outlays that tells us about consumer ability to spend and their spending habits. Both readings are forecasted to rise 0.4% for September.
• However, what makes this report so important are the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) indexes in the data that are the Fed’s preferred inflation readings.
• Forecasts have the overall PCE rising 0.3% and the core PCE up 0.2% for September. On an annual basis, analysts are expecting to see the overall rate rise 0.1% to 2.8% while the year-over-year core pace held at August’s 2.9%. Favorable news for rates would be smaller increases in all of the report’s readings.
• Closing out this week's economic calendar will be the University of Michigan's initial Index of Consumer Sentiment for December at 10:00 AM ET tomorrow. Forecasts have this month’s reading higher than November's final reading, meaning surveyed consumers currently feel better about their own financial and employment situations than they did last month. A lower reading would be considered good news for mortgage rates.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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