
• Friday’s mortgage rates should be higher by approximately .125 of a discount point. The bond market is currently down 5/32 (4.11%).
• Stocks are showing early gains of 232 points in the Dow and 139 points in the Nasdaq.
• This morning’s big news was the release of the previously delayed Personal Income and Outlays report from September. The most important readings in the report are the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) indexes that the Fed uses as their primary inflation gauge.
• Today’s release revealed a 0.3% increase in the overall September PCE while the core reading rose 0.2%. Both the overall and core readings stood at 2.8% on a year-over-year basis.
• All of the PCE readings pegged forecasts except the annual core that was a tad softer than expected.
• The other headline numbers in the report didn’t give any surprises. Personal income rose 0.4% and income rose 0.3% in September. Since this data is aged now and there was no significant variance from forecasts, we saw the bond market show little reaction to the release.
• Today’s second report was December’s preliminary Index of Consumer Sentiment from the University of Michigan at 10:00 AM ET. They announced a reading of 53.3 that was higher than expected and an increase from November’s 51.0. The increase means more surveyed consumers feel better about their own financial situation now than they did last month and are like to spend more in the immediate future.
• Next week doesn’t have much in terms of economic data for the markets to digest, but it does bring us the much-debated FOMC meeting and a couple of Treasury auctions that can affect mortgage rates more than the other monthly auctions. This meeting also includes updated economic projections and dot plot from the Fed.
• Most of the week’s activities come over the middle days, leaving weekend headlines to drive bond trading and mortgage pricing Monday.
• We should see a very active week in the markets, meaning plenty of movement in mortgage pricing also.
• Look for details on all of next week’s calendar in Sunday evening’s weekly preview.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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