Mortgage investors suffered a major "Maalox Moment" this morning when the government reported the economy grew at a significantly faster-pace than expected in the July through September period. The Commerce Department said their first estimate of Gross Domestic Product, a statistical measure of the value of all the goods and service produced in the country, showed a gain of 3.5%. The economic growth in the third-quarter of 2009 was the fastest since the third-quarter of 2007. The gain in third-quarter GDP was generally broad-based, with solid gains in consumer spending, exports and investment in home-construction.
It seems for the time being mortgage investors are simply glossing over the fact that the big gains in consumer spending and residential investment were largely driven by limited term government stimulus programs like "cash-for-clunkers" and the first-time homebuyer tax credit.
The latest gain in GDP growth stands in stark contrast to the 12 month period that ended in June 2009, a period when the economy turned in its worst performance in 70 years. The four consecutive quarterly GDP declines through the Q2 2009 marks the longest stretch of negative national economic growth since quarterly records began in 1947.
The question that bond traders and stock investors will be attempting to answer now has to do with the sustainability of economic growth. Was the outstanding third-quarter performance a "one-trick-pony," created by large amounts of government support - or was it another piece of evidence suggesting the Great Recession is coming to a close?
Some analysts point to the fact that if we strip out auto sales, production, and inventories, the economy grew at 1.9% last quarter - a very lethargic rate of growth at best. While I agree with the idea that modest growth is better than no growth at all - the likelihood of sustainable and meaningful economic growth is, in my judgment, still very much dependant on job growth. The consumer is the engine that drives more than 70% of our domestic economic activity -- and until the employment picture improves dramatically - the probabilities are high that the national economic growth prospects will remain anemic.
Speaking of employment -- a separate report from the Labor Department this morning showed the number of workers filing new claims for jobless benefits dipped by 1,000 during the week ended October 24th. The still-elevated numbers of continuing claims (a measure of those drawing benefits after the initial week) and those claiming extended benefits and support from the Emergency Unemployment Compensation program paints nothing but a very dismal picture of current conditions in the labor market.
Uncle Sam is conducting the last of this week's scheduled four-part Treasury auctions. On the block today is a $31 billion stack of 7-year notes. Since March of this year the Fed has been a relatively strong buyer of these securities. That is the good news. The bad news is their $300 billion dollar direct purchase program draws to a close today. The Fed as already spent $298.063 billion of their total allocation -- and they will drop the last of it on Treasury securities maturing in the next 4- to 7-years before the end of the day.
Keep your fingers crossed that the bidding at today's auction remains aggressive without the support of the Fed direct purchases. The more aggressive the bidding is for the 7-year notes -- the better the prospects for steady mortgage interest rates. If today's 7-year note sale is a bust - look for mortgage interest rates to edge higher before the end of the day.
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