MBS Weekly Commentary | Week Ending 12/23/22
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Hitting the Monetary Throttle
MCT would like to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays. Talk to close the year has been dominated by the Federal Reserve’s most aggressive policy tightening in four decades and its impact on the economy, and for us the residential housing market.
Policymakers’ initial instinct during the pandemic was to enact relief measures as a form of economic preservation, stimulating the economy to keep the pandemic from setting off a deep recession. Stimulus packages are meant to elevate spending and demand, but?if supply can’t keep up with the new demand, prices will rise, and have risen. Central banks were slow to respond, believing that the inflation would fall as the pandemic faded, but inflation was essentially allowed to increase unchecked.
America not only spent among the most of any country in the world on economic relief, but the Fed viewed rising prices as a temporary phenomenon, not acknowledging until late last year that inflation was persisting.?While the inflation numbers are the motivating factor for Fed policy, the strength of the labor market has been the justification for its four sequential 75 BPS rate increases?before pivoting to 50 BPS at the December FOMC meeting. This latest hike won’t be the Fed’s last; the Fed’s updated economic projections assume high inflation will stick around a little longer than previously expected.
Just How Tight is the Labor Market?
The labor market is indeed tight when you look at job openings, the unemployment rate and wage increases, affirming the Fed’s aggressive course. Further robust job numbers going forward give the central bank more leeway to enact and maintain a restrictive monetary policy. However,?if the labor market isn’t as tight as the Fed thinks, then it has probably overshot proper monetary policy at this point. We have seen some softening in labor market conditions recently and high continuing jobless claims suggests that it may be becoming more difficult to find a job as employers are taking a more cautious-minded approach with their hiring plans.
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30-year mortgage lending rates have rallied as of late, down around 100 BPS since hitting a 2022 high of 7.16% in late October,
Wages have risen at a rapid pace over the last couple of years and Americans are bringing home more money than ever, but are poorer than they have ever been.?It is important to understand that real wages matter, not nominal wages.?Home affordability is becoming more and more a function of incomes. Incomes rising at the fastest rate in decades helps blunt the impact of rising payments, and wages are “sticky,” meaning they don’t fall easily. For the housing industry, that fortunately means October and November will almost certainly be the peak of unaffordability as rates continue to fall and home price appreciation slows, squaring the circle so to speak.
Focus on the Data
The recent rally in 30-year mortgage lending rates, down around 100 BPS since hitting a 2022 high of 7.16% in late October, helps. This week ahead of the holidays is always a quiet one for trading, however we received a lot of meaningful housing data (homebuilder sentiment – down, existing home sales – worse than expected, housing starts – above forecast, and new home sales – above expectations), as well as the third revision to last quarter’s GDP (revised upward more than expected) and personal incomes / spending (the Fed’s preferred PCE index showed the annualized U.S. inflation rate falling to 5.5% in November).
That’s obviously a mixed bag of data for the Fed to parse through and determine monetary policy upon, an unenviable job.?There will be no Federal Reserve speakers on schedule through the end of the year, so no market-moving headlines should come from that space until 2023. In fact, the next FOMC rate decision isn’t until February 1.?I would remind you that in addition to recommending enjoying your time with friends and family over the holidays, that quantitative tightening has just gotten under way and there is a long way to go before we see 2% annualized inflation again.
Originally appeared on - https://mct-trading.com/mbs-weekly-market-commentary-week-ending-12-23-22/
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