Very Calm Reaction But Not Too Surprising

Very Calm Reaction But Not Too Surprising

One could argue that CPI is the next biggest potential market mover after the jobs report. With that in mind, it might seem surprising that MBS are heading out the door roughly unchanged and 10yr yields are down less than 3bps. It becomes less surprising when we consider inflation was mostly in line with expectations. Elevated unrounded core numbers were offset by decent drop in supercore (services excluding energy and shelter). When it comes to this morning's initial rally, we'd give more credit to supercore than we would to the pop in Jobless Claims, but both probably played a role. Either way, all today's CPI really needed to do was stay out of the way of rate cut signals in the last jobs report, and it generally did.

Market Movement Recap
08:46 AM

Initially stronger after data, but pulling back a bit.  MBS roughly unchanged and 10yr down 1.7bps at 4.032

02:03 PM

Holding modest gains.  MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr down 3.2bps at 4.017

04:05 PM

Fairly flat, but near weaker levels of the past few hours. MBS up only 1 tick (.03) and 10yr down 2.9bps at 4.02

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Underwhelming Day, But in a Good Way

MBS & Treasury Markets
UMBS 5.5 101.19 -0.01 10YR 4.027% -0.022% 9/11/2025 5:00PM EST
This is more of a heads-up than a dire reprice alert.  MBS are still up 1 tick on the day (0.03) and things have been reasonably flat all day.  Slow erosion in bonds has now added up to MBS being down just over an eighth of a point from the mid-morning highs.  Since those highs coincide with some lenders' rate sheet print times, negative reprices can't be ruled out among the jumpier lenders.  Best way to use this alert: as a cue to lock if you were alre...   READ MORE
Today's Mortgage Rates
30YR Fixed 6.27% -0.02% 15YR Fixed 5.70% +0.00% 9/11/2025
Today's inflation report (the Consumer Price Index or CPI) certainly had a chance to create volatility for rates, but things ended up staying fairly calm.  There are multiple subheadings of data that the bond market cares about when it come to CPI. Most of them were in line with expectations, or close enough to avoid surprising investors. The absence of surprise gave way to some improvement in bonds which, in turn, allowed mortgage lenders to start the day at just slig...   READ MORE
Economic Calendar
Time Event Period Actual Forecast Prior
Thursday, Sep 11
8:30AM Aug/30 Continued Claims (k) Aug/30 1939K 1950K 1940K
8:30AM Aug y/y Headline CPI (%) Aug 2.9% 2.9% 2.7%
8:30AM Aug m/m Headline CPI (%) Aug 0.4% 0.3% 0.2%
8:30AM Sep/06 Jobless Claims (k) Sep/06 263K 235K 237K
8:30AM Aug y/y CORE CPI (%) Aug 3.1% 3.1% 3.1%
8:30AM Aug m/m CORE CPI (%) Aug 0.3% 0.3% 0.3%
1:00PM 30-Yr Bond Auction (bl) 22
1:00PM 30-Year Bond Auction 4.651% 4.813%
2:00PM Aug Federal budget, $ (bl) Aug $-345B $-285.5B $-291B
Friday, Sep 12
12:00AM Roll Date - UMBS 30YR
10:00AM Sep Consumer Sentiment (ip) Sep 58 58.2
10:00AM Sep Sentiment: 5y Inflation (%) Sep 3.5%
10:00AM Sep U Mich conditions Sep 61.3 61.7
10:00AM Sep Sentiment: 1y Inflation (%) Sep 4.8%
12:00PM WASDE Report (%)
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Rates actually began the week with a modest move higher for a variety of boring, technical reasons that no one will remember or care about after seeing how things ended up on Friday. The move was already reversing on Wednesday with help from economic data (lower Job Openings in July, not to be confused with Friday's jobs report for August). At that point, rates had already officially hit new 11... READ MORE