Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Mortgage investors nudged rates fractionally lower this morning after a revision to the government's data for third-quarter economic growth came in just below expectations and fanned some doubt about the sustainability of the budding economic recovery.



The Commerce Department's second estimate of third-quarter economic output showed growth running at a 2.8% pace rather than the 3.5% annualized clip originally reported. It was the strongest level of economic growth since the third-quarter of 2007 and was driven in large part by government fiscal stimulus programs. If all of Uncle Sam's various "booster" shots designed to support third-quarter growth are removed, our domestic economy would have barely registered a pulse. As long as the economy remains on government sponsored life support -- any upward pressure on mortgage interest rates will likely be muted.



Another day - another government debt auction. Uncle Sam will be in the credit markets today looking to auction off a $42 billion stack of 5-year notes. Yesterday's 2-year note auction results were decent but unremarkable, marking a retreat from the string of spectacular sales results in recent months. Hopes are high that today's offering will be well bid. If so, this auction will likely be a non-event as far as its impact on the trend trajectory of mortgage interest rates is concerned. Keep your fingers crossed that this assessment proves accurate. A poorly bid note auction could very well create a "snowball-effect" that pushes both government debt yields and mortgage interest rates higher.

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