Monday, December 8, 2014

Primary pulse 12/8/14

Good afternoon,
 
Fed Funds Futures Point to Quicker Rate Increase
by Craig Dismuke
The only economic report this morning is the Fed’s Labor Market Conditions index, an aggregation of 19 monthly labor market indicators. Increasingly, the Fed does not need to rely on the aggregated index to affirm that the jobs market is getting stronger (more on this below). Thursday will bring the most important release of the week, November’s Retail Sales report. November’s sales data is likely to be held back at the headline level because of less spending on gasoline. What will be more important to watch will be the core sales data, which is expected to show 0.5% MoM growth. With a lot of the holiday sales being pulled forward, November’s sales data will take on more importance this year. 

Last Friday’s labor data has re-established the flattening-curve tone for the bond market. The report was very strong across-the-board with another 321k payrolls added in November, 44k added to the September and October figures, the best pace of annual job growth since 1999 through only 11 months of the year, an increase in hours worked, a 0.4% MoM increase in wages, and a 177k drop in those employed-part-time-for-economic-reasons. Certainly there are concerns about the structural shift that has taken place in the labor market with fewer and fewer people participating in the labor force, which has been largely attributable to the aging population. But for Fed policy purposes, the biggest question is the cyclical dynamic of wage inflation. With the unemployment rate dropping 1% per year, wage inflation appears to be on the horizon. It may still take some time to materialize, but the markets try to respond to things on the horizon. The expectation from the markets after such a strong batch of labor figures will be for a future rate hike by the Fed. Whether that is March, June, or July of next year is less relevant than the fact that there will likely be one (or at least the data supports there being an increase). This will push short yields higher in anticipation of a hike. Already on Friday, the 2-year Treasury yield rose from 0.55% to 0.64% as the market priced in a 70% chance for a rate hike in June. Recall that the 2-year had dropped all the way back down to 0.27% in mid-October. This is likely to be one of the themes of 2015, a flattening yield curve with short yields leading the curve higher. 


Japan’s economy fared worse than initially expected in 3Q, contracting 1.9% versus initial estimates of a 1.6% contraction. According to Bloomberg, “Japan's recession was deeper than initially estimated, a blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as he campaigns for re-election ... Weaker-than-expected business investment sapped the world's third-biggest economy, compounding damage from a slump in consumer spending after a sales-tax rise in April. With the main opposition party caught unprepared, Abe is on-track to win the Dec. 14 election, even as a decline in the yen cuts into people's spending power.”


WSJ: “Many of the world's top policy makers are rewriting their economic forecasts for the U.S., Europe, Japan and elsewhere, betting plummeting oil prices will lead to an overall boost in the global economy by delivering a windfall to consumers and manufacturers. Officials at the [IMF] ... U.S. Federal Reserve and [ECB] have in recent days shrugged off concerns that the tumbling cost of crude signals a global slowdown. … Instead, they project cheaper oil will be a shot in the arm for the world economy overall, especially countries with high energy tabs. Stanley Fischer , vice chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, called it a 'supply shock' that will help the U.S. 'It's more likely to increase GDP than reduce it,' he said. 'The effect is unambiguously positive,' [ECB] President Mario Draghi declared after the bank's monthly meeting last week. Some economists warn that the nearly 40 percent plunge in crude-oil prices in recent months is more a harbinger of gloom ... This time, though, a range of supply-boosting factors is shifting the calculus for many officials and economists - from advanced drilling techniques to a revival in Libyan oil supply and a bid by some Middle Eastern producers to price competitors out of the market.”
 
 
Capital Markets
Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc.
1480 North 2200 West| Salt Lake City|  Utah| 84116
Toll Free 1.800.255.2792
 
o         Tick       1/32 or .03125
o         MBS       Mortgage Backed Security
o         TBA       To Be Announced (MBS with unknown future delivery)
o         Spec      Specified Pool
 
The contents in this memo are not an endorsement of any financial products or investments. PRMI assumes no liability, and will not make any recommendations with respect to the purchase or sale of any investment security or its derivatives.
Economic Calendar

Date/Time(Central)
Indicator
Period
Est.
Actual
Prior
Revised
12/9/2014 9:00 AM
Wholesale Inventories
OCT
0.1%
0.3%
12/9/2014 9:00 AM
Wholesale Trade
OCT
--
0.2%
12/10/2014 6:00 AM
MBA Mortgage Apps.
5-Dec
--
-7.3%
12/11/2014 7:30 AM
Retail Sales Ex-Autos
NOV
0.1%
0.3%
12/11/2014 7:30 AM
Import Price Index (MoM)
NOV
-1.7%
-1.3%
12/11/2014 7:30 AM
Initial Jobless Claims
6-Dec
297K
297K
12/11/2014 7:30 AM
Continuing Jobless Claims
OCT
-1.6%
-0.5%
12/11/2014 7:30 AM
U of Mich. Consumer Confidence
29-Nov
2362K
12/11/2014 9:00 AM
Business Inventories
OCT
0.2%
0.3%
12/12/2014 7:30 AM
PPI (MoM) Ex. Food & Energy
NOV
0.1%
0.4%
12/12/2014 7:30 AM
PPI (YoY) Ex. Food & Energy
NOV
1.8%
1.8%
12/12/2014 8:55 AM
U of Mich. Consumer Confidence
Dec P
89.3
88.8

Monday, December 1, 2014

Primary Pulse 12/1/2014

Good evening and I hope you all had a wonderful and safe Thanksgiving holiday,
 
Pricing remains at all-time year highs while rates are at all-time year lows, the highs marked above 107:00 are from April of last year!  With that said we have a fairly busy week ahead on the economic calendar.  Some highlights are:
 
Date/Time(Central)
Indicator
12/3/2014 7:15 AM
ADP Employment Change
12/3/2014 7:30 AM
Non-Farm Productivity
12/3/2014 7:30 AM
Unit Labor Costs
12/3/2014 1:00 PM
Fed's Beige Book Released
12/4/2014 7:30 AM
Initial Jobless Claims
12/4/2014 7:30 AM
Continuing Jobless Claims
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Change in Nonfarm Payrolls
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Change in Manufact. Payrolls
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Unemployment Rate
 
 
Global Bond Yields Decline to 18-Month Low on Inflation Outlook
2014-12-01 12:02:59.474 GMT
 
 
By Wes Goodman and Eshe Nelson
     Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- A gauge of government bond yields around the world fell to an 18-month low as tumbling oil prices push down inflation expectations and economic growth falters.
     The average yield among securities in the Bank of America Merrill Lynch World Sovereign Bond Index dropped to 1.59 percent at the end of last week, the lowest level since May 2013. Yields fell to record lows from Germany to Italy, as Australia’s 10- year rate declined below 3 percent today for the first time in two years. Interest rates remaining low as central banks battle slow inflation will be the main macroeconomic theme next year, Morgan Stanley said in a report.
     “There is a lack of impetus to sell developed markets because you’re seeing disinflation in most of the major markets,” said Orlando Green, a fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole SA’s corporate and investment banking unit in London. “There are still concerns about the sustainability of the global recovery.” Yields are likely to remain subdued, Green said.
     The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield was little changed at 2.18 percent as of 7:01 a.m. New York time, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader data. The rate fell to 2.16 percent on Nov. 28, the lowest level since Oct. 21. The price of the 2.25 percent note due in November 2024 was 100 21/32.
 
                         Yields Decline
 
     German 10-year yields dropped to as low as 0.69 percent, Italy’s reached 2.005 percent and rates on similar-maturity Austrian, Belgian, Dutch, Finnish, French and Irish bonds also touched all-time lows.
     Australia’s 10-year yield fell as far as 2.98 percent, the lowest since October 2012. Japan’s five-year yield declined to
0.095 percent, matching the all-time low set in March 2013.
     The Bank of America World Sovereign Bond Index has returned
7.8 percent this year, headed for its best annual performance since the global financial crisis of 2008 pushed the U.S.
economy into a recession.
     U.S. crude oil fell below $65 a barrel today to the lowest level since July 2009 after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries kept its production ceiling unchanged last week even as global demand fails to keep pace. Prices have fallen more than $40 a barrel since June.
     “There’s a decrease in inflation pressure and inflation expectations,” said Hiroki Shimazu, the senior market economist in Tokyo at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc., a unit of Japan’s second-largest publicly traded bank. “It’s supporting the bond market globally.”
     Shimazu said he’s considering cutting his year-end forecast for 10-year Treasuries of 3 percent.
 
                         Global Economy
 
     Chinese manufacturing slowed for a second month in November, according to a government report today. Euro-area inflation slowed in November to match the least in five years, data last week showed. Japan’s economy has contracted for two quarters.
     Treasuries may pause following a six-day rally before reports this week on manufacturing and jobs, said John Gorman, the Tokyo-based head of dollar interest-rate trading for Asia and the Pacific at Nomura Holdings Inc. The company is one of the 22 primary dealers that trade directly with the Federal Reserve.
     “It wouldn’t surprise me if we come off a touch,” Gorman said. “There’s a lot of data out there that’s still very supportive of the U.S. economy.”
     The Labor Department’s monthly employment report Dec. 5 will show the U.S. economy added 228,000 jobs in November, versus 214,000 in October, based on a Bloomberg News survey of economists.
 
                          Output Slows
 
     The Institute for Supply Management factory index due today slid to 58 from 59, another survey shows. October’s figure matched the highest level in 3 1/2 years.
     Markit Economics will say today that its own U.S.
manufacturing index fell, based on responses from economists.
The company is updating an initial estimate.
     The bond rally in response to falling oil prices is misguided, according to Sean Keane, an analyst in Auckland at Triple T Consulting.
     Lower crude costs will eventually act as a stimulus to the global economy, Keane wrote in a report Nov. 28. The bond market reaction will probably end up being wrong, he wrote.
     The Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation has failed to increase more than its goal of 2 percent for 30 consecutive months.
 
                        Inflation Outlook
 
     The difference between yields on U.S. 10-year notes and similar-maturity Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, a gauge of expectations for consumer prices over the life of the debt, shrank to as little as 1.789 percentage points today, the narrowest in three years.
     Globally, bond investors anticipate consumer prices will rise an average 1.18 percent a year, based on yields of government debt for developed nations included in indexes compiled by Bank of America Corp. Inflation expectations were almost twice as high in 2008.
     “The dominant macro theme in 2015 will be central banks’
battle against lowflation -- excessively low and economically harmful inflation that has become pervasive across the global economy,” Joachim Fels, Morgan Stanley’s London-based chief global economist, wrote in a report yesterday. “We expect central banks to pick up the gauntlet and fight back against lowflation with further monetary accommodation that will keep interest rates low and global liquidity ample throughout 2015.”
     The Fed will raise interest rates early in 2016, according to Morgan Stanley, which is also a primary dealer that trade directly with the U.S. central bank. Policy makers have kept their target for overnight lending between in a range of zero to
0.25 percent since 2008.
     The implied yield on 30-day fed fund futures contracts show investors expect the rate to be 0.545 percent in January 2016.
 




 
Capital Markets
Primary Residential Mortgage, Inc.
1480 North 2200 West| Salt Lake City|  Utah| 84116
Toll Free 1.800.255.2792
 
o         Tick       1/32 or .03125
o         MBS       Mortgage Backed Security
o         TBA       To Be Announced (MBS with unknown future delivery)
o         Spec      Specified Pool
 
The contents in this memo are not an endorsement of any financial products or investments. PRMI assumes no liability, and will not make any recommendations with respect to the purchase or sale of any investment security or its derivatives.
Economic Calendar
Date/Time(Central)
Indicator
Period
Est.
Actual
Prior
Revised
12/1/2014 9:00 AM
ISM Manufacturing
NOV
58.0
59.0
12/1/2014 9:00 AM
ISM Prices Paid
NOV
52.1
53.5
12/2/2014 9:00 AM
Construction Spending (MoM)
OCT
0.6%
-0.4%
12/2/2014 12:00 PM
Total Vehicle Sales
NOV
16.58M
16.35M
12/2/2014 12:00 PM
Domestic Vehicle Sales
NOV
13.30M
13.12M
12/3/2014 6:00 AM
MBA Mortgage Apps.
28-Nov
--
-4.3%
12/3/2014 7:15 AM
ADP Employment Change
NOV
225K
230K
12/3/2014 7:30 AM
Non-Farm Productivity
3Q F
2.4%
2.0%
12/3/2014 7:30 AM
Unit Labor Costs
3Q F
0.0%
0.3%
12/3/2014 9:00 AM
ISM Non-Manf. Composite
NOV
57.5
57.1
12/3/2014 1:00 PM
Fed's Beige Book Released
12/4/2014 7:30 AM
Initial Jobless Claims
29-Nov
295K
313K
12/4/2014 7:30 AM
Continuing Jobless Claims
22-Nov
2314K
2316K
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Change in Nonfarm Payrolls
NOV
230K
214K
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Change in Manufact. Payrolls
NOV
15K
15K
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Unemployment Rate
NOV
5.8%
5.8%
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Avg. Hourly Earnings (MoM)
NOV
0.2%
0.1%
12/5/2014 7:30 AM
Trade Balance
OCT
-$41.2B
-$43.0B
12/5/2014 9:00 AM
Factory Orders
OCT
0.0%
-0.6%
12/5/2014 2:00 PM
Consumer Credit
OCT
$16.500B
$15.924B