Monday, November 23, 2009

Monday, November 23, 2009

The credit markets are setting up for another huge dose of supply from Uncle Sam this week. The Treasury Department will be peddling $118 billion worth of 2-, 5- and 7-year notes over the course of the next three business days. The action starts this afternoon with the sale of $44 billion of 2-year notes.



Despite the supply pressure, recent government debt sales have drawn generally solid demand. At a minimum this week's offering will likely be welcomed by those players looking for a safe place to park cash until 2010. This week's auction schedule may create a little temporary choppiness in the mortgage market but the debt sales should pass without dramatically influencing the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates much one way or the other.


The National Association of Realtors announced this morning that the pace of Existing Home Sales posted a surprisingly sharp 10.1% gain in October, following a similarly strong 8.8% gain in September. At 6.1 million annualized units, existing home sales are up nearly 24% compared with year ago levels and are currently running at their strongest pace since early '07. Even though the sales price of existing homes slid 7.1% lower as compared to last year -- it was the second consecutive month that the sales price slumped at a single-digit clip - making the October price dip a victory of sorts. The median price of an existing home in October was $173,100. Sales of previously owned homes, which make up more than 90% of the market, are complied from contract closings and may reflect purchases agreed upon weeks or months earlier.



The current condition of the housing market will be more accurately reflected when the October new home sales data is released on Wednesday (8:30 a.m. ET). The new home sales data is recorded when the contract is signed, not when the transaction closes, and is therefore considered by investors to be a far more timely indication of demand in the housing sector. Mortgage investors have an October New Home Sales gain of 4.5% already priced into their rate sheets. If the actual number closely approximates the forecast -- look for mortgage interest rates to remain little changed. A stronger than expected new home sales number will likely put some upward pressure on mortgage interest rates while a sharply lower than anticipated value will tend to support steady to perhaps fractionally lower rates.



FYI: Saint Louis Fed president James Bullard told reporters this weekend that he believes the central bank should keep alive its mortgage-related assets purchase program beyond its planned expiration at the end of March 2010. Bullard feels the program should be sustained at a "very low level" to give policymakers more flexibility as they work to extract the economy from a very painful recession. Mr. Bullard won't actually have a vote of policy matters until 2010.

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