Decent Recovery After Friday's PCE Numbers Clarify Thursday's PCE Numbers
Fri, Apr 26 2024, 5:21 PM
MBS Recap
Decent Recovery After Friday's PCE Numbers Clarify Thursday's PCE Numbers
MBS Recap Matthew Graham | 5:20 PM
Decent Recovery After Friday's PCE Numbers Clarify Thursday's PCE Numbers
Thursday's quarterly PCE numbers were much higher than expected. That meant an increased risk that Friday's monthly numbers would follow suit. While today's PCE was higher than expected in places, the important month-over-month core PCE was in line with expectations (but only because last month was revised higher). In short, inflation is still higher than the Fed wants it and higher than the market expected, but not quite as high as yesterday's report suggested--at least not for the month of March (Jan and Feb, however, were even higher than the market previously traded). There was a moderately good rally after the data and then a sideways grind in the PM hours with yields remaining higher than they were before all this fun began on Thursday morning.
A hair stronger overnight with additional gains after PCE data. MBS up 6 ticks (.19) and 10yr down 4.5bps at 4.66.
11:08 AM
Best levels of the day. MBS up 9 ticks (.28) and 10yr down 4.1bps at 4.662.
01:53 PM
Off the best levels, but very calm trading. MBS up a quarter point. 10yr down 3.1bps at 4.673
05:16 PM
Out like a sideways little lamb. MBS up 10 ticks (.31). 10yr down 3.9 bps at 4.665
Lock / Float Considerations
Friday's monthly PCE data defused much (but not all) of the anxiety created by Thursday's quarterly PCE reading. Taken together, the past two days suggest the bond market is at the right levels, feeling defensive about persistent inflation, as it heads into the coming week's big ticket data and events. Those events (Fed, Treasury issuance, jobs report) could result in a reasonably big move even before, but the biggest volatility risk/opportunity is CPI on May 15.