My Mortgage Blog

Mortgage Market Update 12-16-2011

December 16th, 2011 3:48 PM by Nick Rapplean

Optimism about the US economy has actually crowded Europe off-screen from time to time this week.
     
The center of US happy-talk: an abrupt decline in new filings for unemployment insurance. Stuck near 400,000 each week for 18 months, last week's figure dropped to 366,000. As in all things economic, changes in trend are more important than absolute numbers, and it will take a while to verify this one. If accurate and durable, fewer layoffs is a good thing, but it is not hiring. Might just be running out of people to lay off.
     
Optimists point for confirmation to the NFIB small business survey, whose overall index has risen four months running. However, it's a hair weaker than a year ago and statistically unchanged since the post-pit summer of 2009. However, the employment sub-index is slightly in positive ground for the first time since 2007. Maybe it's a turn, or maybe over-cut small biz has enough confidence in stability to staff an empty slot, but it's no rocket. The sub-index of sales has weakened steadily since April.
     
One of the best overall indicators is Federal tax receipts, cutting though analytic fog and spin: Federal receipts last month were $13 billion ahead of last year. Ain't nobody payin' taxes on income they didn't really get.
     
Inflation is a non-problem, CPI flat in November, and as the rest of the world slows, inflation is more likely to be a too-low problem than too high. Industrial production slipped .2% after a strong month. Wizards of forecasting think GDP will have grown 3.5% this month, and we'll see. Feels more like a number than a sidewalk reality.
     
Europe. Mainstream media last week trumpeted Merkel's great success in gaining agreement for pan-European fiscal enforcement, and pilloried David Cameron for his UK no-thanks. Now we know: bullied by Merkel in her pickelhaube and Kaiser Bill moustache, nasty little French poodle in her lap snapping at passersby, several of the others gave polite "Ja" without any agreement at all. European banks are imploding again. Desperate efforts at fiscal discipline to support sovereign bonds are undercutting economies and tax revenue, hurting European bonds by other means.
     
The fear-effect here: the Treasury this week auctioned masses of 10- and 30-year bonds, and bidders over-subscribed 3.5:1, two-thirds from overseas. The 10-year T-note today is 1.84%, last so low on October 1, unfortunately with no follow-through to mortgages stuck above 4.00%. That absence of mortgage buyers is yet another signal that financial markets here are still deeply impaired.
     
Lest European governments get all the credit for mangling the public interest, consider the newest adventure here, transcending dysfunction. The President took time out from his pre-campaign snit to demand an extension to the payroll tax cut, and even this free-spender insisted that new revenue would be found to "pay" for the cut. Predictably Republicans wanted to cut spending in alternate "payment."
     
No serious person thinks the extension even if not paid for would do anything for the economy except to waste another couple of hundred billion bucks. However, the "pay for" mania no matter how done will convert the whole exercise into cutting a foot off of one end of a blanket and sewing it on the other end.
     
Except. None of the pay-fors propose replacing the revenue lost to Social Security, a high cost to pay for political posturing.
     
And except. I'm not sure that it will pass, but there has been bi-partisan support to pay for part of the payroll cut with a Fannie-Freddie mortgage surcharge, adding a tax on the weakest component of the US economy in the form of higher rates. Meanwhile, of course, the Fed's "Twist" is trying to push down mortgage rates, and at any crack in economic optimism the Fed will deploy QE3 focused on mortgages.
     
Few people expect much from government, now, except two minority parties each content in its corner to glare at the other. Finding agreement only in the idiocy of a mortgage surcharge transcends black comedy. If we get some action out of the Ghost of Christmas Present this year, I hope it's to awaken and embolden the political center.
Maybe, maybe… fingers crossed.

Posted in:General
Posted by Nick Rapplean on December 16th, 2011 3:48 PM

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