


• Friday’s mortgage rates should be approximately .250 - .375 of a discount point higher if compared to Thursday’s early pricing. Some lenders issued an intraday increase in rates late yesterday, so the size of this morning’s change depends on the size of the revision you saw yesterday afternoon. The bond market is currently down 8/32 (4.18%).
• Stocks are mixed yet again with the Dow up 42 points and the Nasdaq down 179 points.
• Yesterday’s 30-year Treasury Bond auction drew mixed results. Some of the benchmarks we use to gauge investor appetite for the securities indicated a solid investor demand compared to last month’s auction, but in line with an average of the six preceding sales.
• It appears the most noticeable part of yesterday’s afternoon bond weakness began about an hour after results were announced at 1:00 PM ET. This means that while the auction results may have contributed to the afternoon increase in rates, they weren’t the core reason for it.
• We don’t have any relevant economic data coming today that is expected to affect bond trading or mortgage pricing.
• The only thing that appears to have the potential to cause a change in rates are a few Fed-member speeches scheduled. Most of these speeches are about mundane topics such as financial regulation or payment systems. That said, market traders will be listening for hints about the Fed’s future monetary policy moves.
• Next week looks to be fairly busy with relevant economic releases and other events that may have an impact on rates. Included in them are a couple of highly important economic reports such as the long-delayed Employment report and Consumer Price Index (CPI) that can be extremely influential on the financial and mortgage markets.
• Monday has none of the data scheduled but there are two more Fed speeches that we will be watching.
• Look for details on all of next week’s activities 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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