Mortgage applications soar

Home loan demand surges to near four-year high

By Julie Haviv

(Reuters) U.S. mortgage applications surged last week, with demand hitting its highest in nearly four years as interest rates plunged, an industry group said on Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage applications, which includes both purchase and refinance loans, for the week ended January 11 surged 28.4 percent to 906.4, its highest since the week ended April 2, 2004.

Borrowing costs on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, excluding fees, averaged 5.62 percent, down 0.11 percentage point from the previous week, and its lowest since the week ended July 1, 2005, when they stood at 5.58 percent.

Interest rates were below year-ago levels at 6.19 percent.

Douglas Duncan, chief economist at the MBA, said the robust data offers a glimmer of hope for housing.

“When consumers see an opportunity, no matter how pessimistic they might be, they take it,” he said. “It will improve the underlying state of the industry and the longer rates stay down, the more people will take advantage of the opportunity, so that is a good thing.”

Mortgage rates have fallen along with U.S. Treasury yields. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield fell below 3.68 percent on Tuesday, its lowest since July 2003 as stocks plunged and expectations of aggressive interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve rose. Yields move inversely to price.

Overall mortgage applications last week were 35.9 percent above their year-ago level. The four-week moving average of mortgage applications, which smoothes the volatile weekly figures, was up 10.1 percent to 687.5.

Fixed 15-year mortgage rates averaged 5.07 percent, down from 5.21 percent the previous week. Rates on one-year adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) decreased to 5.77 percent from 6.04 percent.

Demand Surges

The MBA’s seasonally adjusted purchase index, widely considered a timely gauge of new home sales, jumped 11.4 percent to 461.2, its highest since the week ended December 7, 2007. The index came in above its year-earlier level of 439.7, a rise of 4.9 percent.

Demand for home loan refinancing surged last week as the group’s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications skyrocketed 43.4 percent to 3,575.5, its highest since the week ended April 2, 2004. The index was up 74.8 percent from its year-ago level of 2,045.8.

The refinance share of applications increased to 62.7 percent from 57.7 percent the previous week. The ARM share of activity edged down to 9.2 percent from 9.3 percent.

“This time of the year you always have to be careful about weather patterns and other factors,” Duncan said. “I really think this is, at least in some instances, evidence that with mortgage rates dropping and house prices having leveled off or fallen in some places, there is an improvement in affordability underway.”

This week ushers in other key data gauging the state of the hard-hit U.S. housing market.

The National Association of Home Builders will release its January NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index on Wednesday and the Commerce Department will release data on December housing starts on Thursday.


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2008-01-16 EU Highlights

Overall, inflation and weakness continues:

European Inflation Holds Above 3% as Food Prices Soar
German 2007 Inflation Fastest Since Records Began
France: Inflation up to 2.3% in Q4 sunk real wages, spending
ECB’s Weber Says Shouldn’t `Over-Dramatize’ Inflation Jump
Europe’s Economies Face `Stagflation’ Risk This Year
Weber Says ECB Won’t Tolerate Excessive Pay Increases
European Car Sales Rose in 2007 on New Fiat, BMW Models
German First-Quarter Growth to Slow to 0.3 Percent
Bank of Italy Cuts 2008 Growth Forecast Due to Euro, Inflation
Bank of France Cuts Fourth-Quarter Growth Forecast to 0.4%
French Populace Grows to 63.8 Million, Second-Highest in Europe
Iceland delays banks’ plans to adopt the euro

Good choice.


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Why I expect US exports to continue to be very strong..

The desire to accumulate $US financial assets has been diminished for at least the following reasons:

  1. Treasury policy – Paulson is actively pushing both a strong yuan and threatening any other CB that buys $US with the label of ‘currency manipulator.’ CB’s had been perhaps the largest source of $US financial assets accumulation and are now limited to compounding of interest.
  2. US foreign policy is probably driving CB’s in less than friendly nations to diversify their reserves away from $US financial assets.
  3. Fed policy has the appearance of a ‘beggar thy neighbor’/’inflate your way out of debt’ policy, as the Fed aggressively cuts rates in the face of inflation not seen in 25 years.

This all sets in motion a downward pricing of the $US as non residents sell them to each other at lower and lower prices in this effort to lower their rate of accumulation of $US financial assets. But these financial assets can only ‘go away’ when they get spent or invested in the US, when US prices are low enough to cause this to happen. The rapid rise in exports and accelerated non resident buying of US real estate and other assets is anecdotal evidence this is taking place as theory predicts.

This is a very large cyclical force that should continue to drive rapidly rising exports for perhaps a year or more. Weak foreign economies should have little effect on this process, as that weakness doesn’t reduce the desire of portfolio managers to shift out of $US financial assets.

This is also highly inflationary for the US. This buying by non residents both drives down the $US and drives up the prices of US exports, now rising at a 7% clip last I checked.

The desired shift is probably well over $1 trillion which means exports will increase by a good part of that to facilitate this transfer.

This can sustain US GDP in the face of falling domestic demand, which will stay relatively low until housing picks up. Employment will remain reasonably good, but standards of living fall as we produce as much, but export more and consume less. We get paid to work but can buy less due to high prices, with our remaining production exported to those wishing to reduce their accumulated $US financial assets.

We’ve been talking about this possibility about a long time, but seems our trade negotiators have finally got their wish.

Meanwhile, Saudis continue to act the swing producer. In fact, they told Bush today they have 2 million bpd capacity in reserve, and that markets are well supplied. At their price, of course.

Probably have been some year end allocations out of crude by pension funds as with the price hikes they would need to sell some to keep the same ‘weight’ in their portfolios. That should be ending soon.

And I agree with Karim, the Fed is not likely to act on inflation until core starts to rise or their measures of inflation expectations start to rise, despite the fact that mainstream theory clearly says if any of that happens it’s too late. Seems to me the senior FOMC members are putting their jobs on the line by taking that kind of systemic risk, which their own theory tells them is far higher than the risk of any lost output from a .


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TAF Results

(from Patrick Doyle)

Below is a table of the results of the last 3 TAF auctions

Of note is the spread to OIS (FF’s) which is inside the historic LIBOR / OIS spread. There were less participants in this round as well

This all bodes well and is showing the easing of pressure in the funding markets.

Jan. 15
2008
Dec. 21
2007
Dec. 19
2007
Stop-out rate: 3.95% 4.67% 4.65%
Total propositions submitted: $55.526 Bil. $57.664 Bil. $61.553 Bil.
Total propositions accepted: $30.000 Bil. $20.000 Bil. $20.000 Bil.
Bid/cover ratio: 1.85 2.88 3.08
Number of bidders: 56 73 93
Term 28-day loan 35-day loan 28-day loan
Settlement Date Jan. 17, 2008 Dec. 27, 2007 Dec. 20, 2007
Maturity Date Feb. 14, 2008 Jan. 31, 2008 Jan. 17, 2008

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2008-01-15 US Economic Releases

2008-01-15 Producer Price Index MoM

Producer Price Index MoM (Dec)

Survey 0.2%
Actual -0.1%
Prior 3.2%
Revised n/a

2008-01-15 PPI Ex Food & Energy MoM

PPI Ex Food & Energy MoM (Dec)

Survey 0.2%
Actual 0.2%
Prior 0.4%
Revised n/a

2008-01-15 Producer Price Index YoY

Producer Price Index YoY (Dec)

Survey 7.1%
Actual 6.3%
Prior 7.2%
Revised n/a

2008-01-15 PPI Ex Food & Energy YoY

PPI Ex Food & Energy YoY (Dec)

Survey 2.0%
Actual 2.0%
Prior 2.0%
Revised n/a

Inflation pressures remain alarming.

2007 highest inflation since the early 1980s, when inflation was on the way down.

Last hit this number on the way up was in the 1970s.


2008-01-15 Advance Retail Sales

Advance Retail Sales (Dec)

Survey 0.0%
Actual -0.4%
Prior 1.2%
Revised 1.0%

Previous month still very high, two month average looks OK.


2008-01-15 Retail Sales YoY % Change

Retail Sales YoY % Change

Year over year numbers still modestly moving back up.


2008-01-15 Retail Sales Less Autos

Retail Sales Less Autos (Dec)

Survey -0.1%
Actual -0.4%
Prior 1.8%
Revised 1.7%

Same as above.


2008-01-15 Empire Manufacturing

Empire Manufacturing (Jan)

Survey 10.0
Actual 9.0
Prior 10.3
Revised 9.8

2008-01-15 Empire Manufacturing TABLE

Empire Manufacturing TABLE

A close look at the table shows prices still very strong.


2008-01-15 Business Inventories

Business Inventories (Nov)

Survey 0.4%
Actual
Prior 0.1%
Revised

Chart looks OK – no excessive build.


Data not in, until 5PM EST..

ABC Consumer Confidence (Jan 13)

Survey -21
Actual
Prior -20
Revised

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Re: more on receipts

(an interoffice email)

On Jan 15, 2008 9:23 AM, Karim Basta wrote:
>
>
>
> US Daily Comment – Tax Receipts: How Good an Indicator?
> Summary: Although Treasury income tax receipts are a popular measure of
> economic activity, they are generally too noisy and susceptible to calendar
> distortions to be very informative. Indeed, the recent strength in
> withholding tax receipts in the fourth quarter (+10.5% year-on-year) seems
> to be largely due to an extra Monday during the quarter. Adjusting for this
> factor, year-on-year growth in withholdings was about 6% year-on-year,
> roughly 3 percentage points below the 2006-2007 average and broadly
> consistent with the data on employment and earnings. In contrast, state
> sales tax receipts are a quite useful measure. While less timely, they are
> also less noisy than income tax receipts and provide information on one
> issue that is poorly covered in the standard economic data, namely
> consumption at a regional level. Recent trends in sales tax receipts are
> consistent with a more substantial consumption slowdown than suggested by
> the national consumption and retail sales data, especially in states hard
> hit by the housing crisis.

Thanks!

Agreed.

Fed tax receipts have been slowing for a year or so, but no sudden drop at year end, just a continuation of the general downslope. Haven’t seen the sales tax graph, but should also reflect gradual fall off in demand.

Twin themes remain: weakness and higher prices.

PPI finished year with largest gain since coming off higher numbers in the early 80’s, and probably 10 years before that when they hit 6% + on the way to higher levels.

Demand is definitely on the weak side, but strong enough to generate alarming price increases in food/fuel/imports/exports.

warren


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2008-01-15 EU Highlights

EU Headlines:

Same twin themes as the US, weakness and inflation:

Spain Core Inflation Rises for Fifth Month on Food
German Economic Growth Slowed as Sales Tax Increased
German Investor Confidence Dropped to 15-Year Low
French inflation at highest level since 2004

by Ben Sills
(Bloomberg) In France, the euro region’s second-biggest economy, inflation accelerated to 2.8 percent in December, the fastest pace in almost four years. Inflation held at 3.1 percent for the whole of the single currency area, matching the fastest pace since the euro was introduced.

Controlling Prices

The European Central Bank is “prepared to act preemptively so that second-round effects and risks to price stability do not materialize,” President Jean-Claude Trichet said at a press conference in Frankfurt Jan. 10.

By Christian Vits and Gabi Thesing
(Bloomberg) ECB policy makers, including President Jean-Claude Trichet and the Bundesbank’s Axel Weber, have threatened to raise interest rates if the increase in inflation leads to so-called second-round effects where workers demand higher wages to offset increased living costs.

European Bonds Gain for Second Day as German Confidence Slumps

anticipating ECB may cut due to weakness like the Fed

Prodi Government Names Antonio Lirosi as First `Inflation Czar’
Germany Says ECB’s Independence Won’t Be Questioned

They support the anti-inflation bias.

Portuguese Inflation Slowed to 2.7% in December on Transport

still high

A few highlights from Middle/Eastern Europe:

Romania Will Cut Budget Gap More to Fight Inflation

Fiscal tightening in general – slowing demand in the Eurozone.

Czech Producer Prices Unexpectedly Declined 0.1% in December

Still high and rising.


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Re: FF vs. LIBOR

(an interoffice email)

On Jan 14, 2008 10:29 AM, Warren Mosler wrote:
> thanks, continued tafs will get it to wherever the fed actually wants
> it. it’s a policy rate they can administer at will.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Jan 14, 2008 10:16 AM, Pat Doyle wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > Today you can say that the spread has narrowed significantly between LIBOR
> > and FFs. The spread on the indices has been above 60 (with a few
> > exceptions) since August. Aug 7th it was 12bps and was over 100 at times.
> > NOW THE SPREAD IS 43.
> >
> >

If it isn’t inflation, what is it?

What we used to call an ‘inflation day’ –

  • $ down/oil up
  • Gold through 900- if nothing else, it’s an inflation expectation indicator (not that they cause anything, just reflect it)
  • Other metals up
  • Grains going parabolic
  • Stocks up

also,

  • Export driven growth means demand coming from and output going to non residents, rather than retail sales and other domestic consumption.
  • Changes of portfolio currency preferences away from the $US are driving the dollar down to low enough levels where non residents buy here to use up some of their $US financial assets.
  • Japan/mof (and others) would probably like to buy $ to keep the yen from rising and hurting their exports, but Paulson has warned the world CB’s that this makes them ‘currency manipulators’ and subject to criticism.

This is an explicit weak $ policy that is probably altering CB portfolio preferences and inducing price pressures on our imports.

The Fed is sending signals it’s fine with this kind of inflation at least as long as they are forecasting the risk of weaker domestic demand as a result (somehow) of financial concerns. And because they analyze the risks as if we had a fixed exchange rate they see the risks of supply side credit issues as those of the great depression of the 1930’s. Doesn’t happen with today’s floating fx.

Don’t know when/if the Fed ‘figures it out’ but the curve can go from wherever it is to seriously negative should the Fed hike aggressively to ‘get ahead of the inflation curve.’

The inflation is coming from non monetary sources – monopolist pricing in oil, biofuels linking food to fuel, portfolio shifts out of $US due to US political rhetoric and apparent Fed policy of inflating your way out of debt without concern for the value of the currency. Enough to scare any portfolio manager out of $US risk.


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2008-01-14 EU Highlights

European News Headlines:

Europe Industrial Production Falls for Second Time in 3 Months

Fed beggar they neighbor policy robbing some demand.

European Bonds Gain on Speculation ECB Won’t Lift Interest Rate

inflation on the rise

Bonello Says Inflation May Slow to 2% by End of Year

He also says this will happen if oil and other prices come down ‘as expected’- must be looking at futures prices.

Italian Industrial Output Falls for Third Month in November
Norway Expects to Drill 35 to 40 Oil-Exploration Wells in 2008

High prices may bring out more supply – some day.

Icelandic January Inflation Holds at Highest Since March

same everywhere


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