
• Monday’s mortgage rates should be approximately .375 - .500 of a discount point lower than Friday’s early pricing. The bond market is currently up 20/32 (4.35%).
• Stocks are erasing overnight futures losses to start the new week with gains of 228 points and 2 points in the Dow and Nasdaq respectively.
• There is no relevant economic data set for release today.
• The rest of the holiday-shortened week has five monthly economic reports scheduled that are likely to influence mortgage rates. Three of them are considered to be highly important and can cause a big move.
• In addition to the data, we will also be following Iran-related headlines and a large number of Fed-member speaking engagements.
• Fed Chairman Powell has a speaking event that starts at 10:30 AM ET this morning. He will be participating in a moderated discussion with a Harvard economics class in Cambridge, Massachusetts. There is little doubt that inflation and the impact the Iran war is having on the economy are topics that will be discussed, meaning we could see a response during late morning or early afternoon trading.
• March's Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) will start this week’s economic releases at 10:00 AM ET tomorrow. The Conference Board, who is a New York-based business research group and not a governmental agency, will post this index that tells us how confident consumers are about their own financial situations. Analysts are predicting a decline, bringing the index down to 88.0 this month from February's 91.2. A lower than predicted reading would be considered good news for mortgage rates.
• Overall, Wednesday is a good candidate to see the biggest move in rates with the ADP employment, Retail Sales and ISM manufacturing reports all set for release. Anytime the governmental Employment report is released, that day automatically becomes a strong possibility also.
• The calmest day could be Thursday unless something unexpected happens.
• We have a correction to make on the Good Friday holiday schedule. The bond market will be open Friday morning for trading and will have an opportunity to react to March’s Employment report before closing at noon ET.
• We mistakenly read the industry’s recommended holiday schedule, saying in last night’s weekly preview that the bond market will be closed Friday and close early Thursday. It appears that bonds will trade a full day Thursday and will close early Friday.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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