


WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON’S UPDATE:
• This week’s FOMC meeting has adjourned with an announcement that no change to key short-term interest rates were made for the fourth consecutive meeting, as was widely predicted.
• The post-meeting statement and the Fed’s dot-plot that lists each member’s predictions of where rates will be in the future clearly show there is a growing consensus that the next move will be a rate hike instead of another rate cut. This is bad news for bonds and mortgage rates because it signals their concern about inflation.
• When inflation is stronger, long-term securities such as mortgage bonds become less appealing to investors, leading to higher rates for mortgage shoppers.
• The Fed’s revised economic projections were a mixed bag for the bond market. They raised their inflation expectations from 2.7% to 3.6% with their core inflation estimates revised higher also.
• They expect the economy to grow at a 2.2% annual pace instead of the previous estimate of 2.4%.
• And they see the U.S. unemployment rate holding at the current rate of 4.3%.
• Overall, the markets have responded negatively to the news with the Dow now showing a 210 point loss and the Nasdaq down 172 points after both were in positive ground this morning.
• The bond market is following suit, currently down 8/32 (4.47%). This is enough of a move to likely cause an intraday revision to mortgage rates by approximately .250 of a discount point. If you haven’t seen a revision yet, you will probably see it soon.
• This morning’s sole relevant economic data was May's Retail Sales report at 8:30 AM ET. It revealed a 0.9% jump in sales while a secondary reading that excludes more costly and volatile auto transactions rose 0.8%. Both readings were well above expectations of up 0.5% and 0.6% respectively, meaning consumers spent much more than anticipated last month.
• Tomorrow brings us the release of two minor economic releases. First will be last week’s unemployment figures at 8:30 AM ET. They are expected to show 226,000 new claims for jobless benefits were filed last week. This would be a decline from the previous week’s announced 229,000 initial filings. Declining claims are a sign of strength in the employment sector, so an unexpected increase would be favorable for mortgage rates.
• The last report of the week will be May's Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) at 10:00 AM ET tomorrow. The LEI is a Conference Board release that attempts to predict economic activity over the next several months. Current forecasts show a 0.1% rise in the indicators. A decline would be good news for the bond and mortgage markets.
• Visit our Daily Commentary page on our site for detailed explanations on current news that is relevant to mortgage rates.
|
Would you like to receive the commentary on a daily or weekly basis? Daily will send a copy Monday - Sunday. Weekly will send only Sunday's weekly overview/preview. Please be assured that we will not share your email address with ANYONE. Just fill out the form below!! |