Settlement Agent Vetting, Servicer Efficiency Tools; STRATMOR on Tech; Investors, Crypto, and DSCR

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Trump Fed majority stalled, not stopped, if Cook remains

Observers said the Supreme Court likely will allow Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook to remain at her post while she challenges her purported removal by President Donald Trump. But her continued presence would slow, rather than stop, the president’s quest for a voting majority on the central bank board.

Bonds Erase Most of The Overnight Weakness

Bonds Erase Most of The Overnight Weakness

Thursday could be viewed two ways. On one hand, bonds lost ground early and were unable to recover it by the 3pm close. On the other hand, there was a decent rally on Wednesday that set a high bar for additional gains.  In other words, it’s a victory to merely hold close to yesterday’s closing levels. Data passed without a trace, either because it was stale, near consensus, or both. There was better buying in the afternoon–a fact that’s consistent with our observation that the EU session had an impact today.  The afternoon bond market recovery commenced when EU markets closed. Correlation, yes, but not necessarily causality. 

Econ Data / Events

Continued Claims (Jan)/10

1,849K vs — f’cast, 1884K prev

Core PCE Prices QoQQ3

2.90% vs 2.9% f’cast, 2.6% prev

Corporate profitsQ3

4.7% vs 4.4% f’cast, 0.2% prev

GDPQ3

4.4% vs 4.3% f’cast, 3.8% prev

GDP Final SalesQ3

4.5% vs 4.6% f’cast, 7.5% prev

Jobless Claims (Jan)/17

200K vs 212K f’cast, 198K prev

PCE Prices (Q/Q)Q3

2.8% vs 2.8% f’cast, 2.1% prev

Core PCE (m/m) (Nov)

0.2% vs 0.2% f’cast, 0.2% prev

Core PCE (y/y) (Nov)

2.8% vs 2.8% f’cast, 2.7% prev

PCE (y/y) (Nov)

2.8% vs 2.8% f’cast, 2.7% prev

PCE prices (m/m) (Nov)

0.2% vs 0.2% f’cast, 0.2% prev

Market Movement Recap

08:34 AM Modestly weaker overnight and no reaction to AM data so far. MBS down an eighth and 10yr up 1.7bps at 4.258

10:30 AM No major reaction to PCE data. MBS still down an eighth and 10yr up 2bps at 4.261

12:37 PM Bouncing back a bit. MBS down only 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr up only 1.3bps at 4.254

03:22 PM MBS down 3 ticks (.09) and 10yr up 0.8bps at 4.249

Property Data, Construction Products; Webinars and Training; STRATMOR on Operational Readiness

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Another Micro-Victory For Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates may not be as low as they were before the weekend’s geopolitical headlines, but they’ve moved just a hair lower on each of the past two days. Specifically, our daily rate index is down to 6.19% after starting the week at 6.21% on Tuesday (up from 6.07% last Friday). While there was a large glut of seemingly important economic data today, it didn’t have a noticeable impact on the bond market. Part of the reason is that the data in question is very stale at this point.  The most recent monthly data covered November and the GDP release was for Q3 (July-Sep). Timeliness aside, the data was also very close to forecasts. There’s even less on the calendar tomorrow, but markets remain susceptible to geopolitical risk and any headlines that speak to the fiscal outlook (tariffs, spending, etc). 

No Reaction to Early Data, But Slightly Weaker Overnight

Bonds found a bid along with stocks yesterday afternoon after Trump announced a “framework of a deal” on Greenland.  Markets were much less interested in U.S. access and more concerned with pausing the more immediate market-related implications (new tariffs and changes in foreign demand for Treasuries). This notion was reinforced this morning as there was no reaction at all to new comments saying the U.S. would have “total access” to Greenland with “no time limit.” 
The early round of econ data also failed to inspire, although that’s no surprise given the stale nature of GDP and generally limited impact of weekly jobless claims (in addition to the fact that jobless claims are sticking to the same script seen in the past 2 years).

All that remains is the PCE inflation data at 10am ET, but it should be noted this is for the months of Oct/Nov and that we’ve already received CPI/PPI inflation reports for December.  Data aside, yields have been trending gradually higher in concert with European markets, but Treasuries still retain a majority of yesterday’s gains.