With nothing on the economic calendar to stir trading activity - mortgage investors are generally marking time ahead of the three-part, $71 billion Treasury debt auction scheduled for Tuesday through Thursday. Believe-it-or-not last week's heavy sell-off in the government debt market has probably limited the upward pressure this event might have otherwise exerted on mortgage interest rates over the course of the next five business days.
Mortgage investors will be intently watching the Treasury auction results for any sign that a change in market psychology occurred in conjunction with last Friday's dramatically improved labor market story - or for an indication skepticism about the sustainability of the budding economic recovery remains high among credit market participants.
Given strong seasonal demand and the sharp price markdowns of last week, I think there is a reasonable chance overall demand for this week's government debt offerings will be decent. Should my assessment prove accurate, the Treasury auctions will tend to be supportive of at least steady mortgage interest rates - with an outside chance rates will find the traction necessary to move to fractionally lower levels.
The economic release of most interest to mortgage investors - the November Retail Sales report - does not arrive until Friday.
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