Trading activity is thin this morning as investors await the results of this afternoon's $16 billion sale of 30-year bonds by the Treasury Department. This auction represents the last leg of a record-sized $81 billion three-part borrowing spree by Uncle Sam. The Treasury sold $40 billion of 3-year notes on Monday and $25 billion of 10-year notes on Tuesday. The 10-year sale drew decent demand while the 3-year note auction generated the strongest buyer appetite in more than 20 years.
One group of analysts is arguing the falling dollar will lure bargain shopping foreign investors in droves to today's 30-year bond sale. The opposing camp is equally convinced that now that the Fed is no longer actively adding to their fixed-income portfolio, these longer-dated securities will likely require higher yields to attract the necessary capital.
Everybody will be watching intently to see if demand steps up on its own. If so, interest rates in general -- and mortgage interest rates in particular --will likely remain little changed. On the other hand, if private demand is weak -- mortgage investors will almost certainly register their displeasure by pushing mortgage interest rates noticeably higher.
In other news of the day - the government reported the number of workers filing new claims for jobless benefits dropped by 12,000 last week. The four-week moving average of new claims, considered a better gauge of underlying trends, fell by 4,500 for the period. During the latest week for which data is available (week ended October 24th) enrollment in extended benefits programs decreased by 28,240 while the Emergency Unemployment Compensation program enrollment rose by 22,400.
Behind all this statistical mumbo-jumbo a story of very gradual improvement in the labor sector is beginning to emerge. Even so, it will likely be an extended period of time before the worst collapse in the labor sector since the Great Depression is declared officially over. Recent economic improvement has to be sustained for many months for hiring to resume, as businesses first increase existing worker hours and bring on temporary workers before increasing payroll head count. The majority of analysts firmly believe it will be well into the second-half of 2010 before the Labor Department's headline nonfarm payroll report shows any meaningful gains. Over the same time frame labor market data will tend to mute the development of upward pressure on mortgage interest rates emanating from other influences.
FYI: Earlier today the Mortgage Bankers of America said their seasonally adjusted index of total mortgage applications rose 3.2% during the week ended November 6th. Requests for refinance loans were up 11.3% while purchase applications slid 11.7% lower.
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