


• Wednesday’s mortgage rates should be nearly unchanged from Tuesday’s early pricing. The bond market is currently down 6/32 (4.08%).
• Stocks may be contributing to this morning’s early bond weakness with the Dow up 270 points and the Nasdaq up 242 points.
• December’s Durable Goods Orders report that was posted at 8:30 AM ET showed a 1.4% decline in new orders for products such as airplanes, appliances and electronics. This was a smaller decline than the 2.0% that was expected. Furthermore, a secondary reading that excludes more costly and volatile transportation-related orders (airplanes), rose 0.9% when analysts had predicted a 0.4% rise. These numbers are a sign that the manufacturing sector was stronger than thought last month.
• Also early this morning was the release of Housing Starts data from late last year that was delayed from the long government shutdown. It revealed new home groundbreakings rose 6.2% in December, exceeding forecasts of approximately 5.0%.
• January’s Industrial Production was our third report of the morning. It also gave us unfavorable results by posting a 0.7% rise in output at U.S. factories, mines and utilities. This was well above expectations of a 0.3% increase. Fortunately, this report is also considered to be only moderately influential, preventing larger losses in this morning’s bond trading.
• We also have two afternoon events that have the potential to influence rates. Results of today’s 20-year Treasury Bond auction will be made available at 1:00 PM ET. Good news for mortgage rates would be a strong demand from investors, indicating a decent appetite for long-term debt. Investor willingness to purchase long-term securities is important to keeping mortgage rates lower.
• The second afternoon event will be the 2:00 PM ET release of the minutes from last month's FOMC meeting. Traders will be looking for any indication of when the Fed may make another cut to key short-term rates. If the minutes hint that a majority of Fed members may be ready to lower key rates sooner than later, we should see a positive reaction in the bond market. This could also contribute to a downward revision in mortgage pricing this afternoon.
• Tomorrow has two moderately important economic reports scheduled. First up will be last week’s unemployment update that is expected to show 225,000 new claims for benefits were filed. This would be a small decline from the previous week’s 227,000. The higher the number of new claims tomorrow, the better the news for mortgage rates.
• December’s Leading Economic Indicators will be posted at 10:00 AM ET tomorrow. This Conference Board release attempts to predict economic activity over the next several months. Tomorrow’s update is expected to reveal a decline of 0.1%, meaning the indicators are predicting flat or modest slowing in economic activity over the next several months. Weaker economic activity is usually considered good news for mortgage rates.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
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