
• Wednesday’s mortgage rates should be lower by approximately .125 of a discount point. The bond market is currently up 9/32 (4.63%).
• Stocks are also showing gains, pushing the Dow up 200 points and the Nasdaq up 247 points.
• We have two afternoon events that have the potential to affect mortgage rates. We will also be watching for headlines from the Middle East for progress on a potential peace plan with Iran.
• Our first scheduled event will be the results announcement of today’s 20-year Treasury Bond auction at 1:00 PM ET. If the results indicate a strong sale, meaning investor demand was high, we could see this morning’s early bond gains extend further during early afternoon trading, possibly leading to a downward revision to rates.
• The auction results will be followed by the 2:00 PM ET release of the minutes from the April 28-29th FOMC meeting that will give more insight into what was discussed while making their decision to leave key short-term interest rates unchanged. Bond traders are looking for comments and discussion that can help form a prediction on what the Fed may or may not do at upcoming meetings. Of particular interest is the direction of inflation, employment stability, and how the Iran war is affecting the economy.
• Discussion in the minutes that leans towards raising key rates before lowering them would be considered bad news for bonds and likely lead to an upward revision in mortgage pricing before the end of the day.
• Tomorrow brings us the release of last week’s unemployment figures and a monthly housing related report that isn’t known to be a big mover of mortgage pricing, both at 8:30 AM ET.
• The weekly unemployment update is expected to show 210,000 new claims for jobless benefits were made last week, down slightly from the previous week’s 211,000 initial filings. Rising claims are a sign of weakness in the employment sector, so the higher the number tomorrow, the better the news for rates.
• April's Housing Starts report gives us a hint of housing sector strength and mortgage credit demand by tracking new home groundbreakings. It is expected to show a decline in new construction starts, pointing to weakness in the new home portion of the housing sector. This report carries a level of significance that is lower than most of the other monthly reports that we see.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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