
• Thursday’s mortgage rates should be modestly lower than Wednesday’s early pricing, due to slight gains in bonds late yesterday. The bond market is currently down 1/32 (4.24%).
• Stocks are showing early weakness due partly to earnings results, pushing the Dow lower by 83 points and the Nasdaq down 371 points.
• The first of this morning’s economic releases was last week’s unemployment update at 8:30 AM ET. It revealed 209,000 new claims for jobless benefits were filed last week, down a tad from the previous week’s upwardly revised 210,000 initial filings. That revision of 10,000 to the previous week’s claims was notable in size.
• Revised 3rd quarter worker productivity numbers were also posted early this morning. There were no revisions to the previous estimates of a 4.9% pace of productivity and a 1.9% decline in a secondary reading that tracks labor costs. With this data aged now and no revision to their initial readings, this data was a non-factor for this morning’s mortgage pricing and bond trading.
• November’s Factory Orders came in stronger than expected to hint at manufacturing sector strength. This morning’s report showed a 2.7% increase in new orders for durable and non-durable goods when forecasts pointed to a 1.3% increase. Fortunately, this report is also old now, allowing bond traders to put little weight in the data.
• There is a 7-year Treasury Note auction taking place today that may have a minor impact on rates this afternoon. Results of the sale will be announced at 1:00 PM ET. If they indicate there was a strong demand from investors, we could see bonds improve slightly during early afternoon trading. If there is a reaction later today, it should be modest and have a minimal impact on mortgage pricing.
• Tomorrow brings us the most important economic release of the week. December’s Producer Price Index (PPI) will be posted at 8:30 AM ET, giving us some insight into inflationary pressures at the wholesale level of the economy.
• Predictions have the overall PPI rising 0.2% and the more important core reading that excludes volatile food and energy costs up 0.3%. On an annual basis, both are expected to retreat a little from November’s 3.0% pace. Smaller than expected increases would be very good news for long-term securities such as mortgage-related bonds, leading to lower rates tomorrow morning.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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