After a decidedly abnormal 6 weeks beginning in early October, bonds began to calm down last week. This offered some hope that the brisk volatility and selling pressure was subsiding. With 10yr yields closing inside a 3bp range for 5 days in a row, the restoration of normality is basically confirmed. Today's data didn't have a big impact, but we wouldn't expect it to (based on the mixed signals). Bonds continue waiting on early December data for the next big push in one direction or the other. The upcoming week is always a bit of a wild card due to the holiday and month-end, but the fact remains that there are no truly top tier market movers.
stronger overnight and steadily weaker during domestic hours. MBS unchanged and 10yr down 1.1bps at 4.409
01:39 PM
Little changed from last update. MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr down 0.9bps at 4.412
03:58 PM
Super sideways, all day, but a bit stronger for MBS, now up an eighth of a point. 10yr down half a bp at 4.417.
Lock / Float Considerations
The burden of proof remains on economic data to make a case for any significant improvement in rates. In other words, don't expect big, sustained improvement without markedly weaker data/inflation. This doesn't mean rates can't drop here and there, but it does mean there's not currently a reason for them to drop very much or for very long unless data makes a case for it. The best hope over the last 2 weeks of November is for volatility to subside and for the prevailing uptrend in rates to run out of steam. These are not the sort of hopes upon which to base lock/float strategy, but it does generally seem like this is what's been happening.