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Kenton Becker,
Sr. Loan Officer
Phone: 206-686-8822
Cell: 206-423-2552
Fax: 206-309-4736
MLO/NMLS #123961
Email Me
22525 SE 64th Place
Suite 220
Issaquah, WA 98027
Events Last Week:
Housing Starts Fell
Philly Fed Down
Jobless Claims Rose
Manufacturing Mixed
Events This Week:
Tues 2/26
Bernanke Speaks
New Home Sales
Wed 2/27
Durable Orders
Pending Sales
Thur 2/28
GDP
Chicago PMI
Fri 3/1
ISM Manuf.
Core PCE
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Core Inflation Remains
Low
It was a quiet week for mortgage rates last week. Most of the
economic data came
in close to expectations and the Fed Minutes
contained no major surprises.
As a result, mortgage rates ended the week just
slightly higher.
The primary message that investors received from
the highly
anticipated Minutes from the January 30 Fed meeting
was that Fed officials
remain divided on the outlook for the Fed's MBS and
Treasury purchase
program. The Fed's current position is that the
program will continue
until substantial improvement in the labor market
takes place,
specifically until the Unemployment Rate declines to
6.5%, as long as
inflation remains below 2.5%. According to the
Minutes, concern about the
costs and the risks of the program appears to be
growing, causing some
officials to suggest that the program may end before
the labor market
goals are reached. The Minutes left investors more
uncertain about future
Fed policy.
The inflation reports released this week showed
that
current levels of core inflation remain far below
the 2.5% rate that would
begin to concern Fed officials. January Core CPI,
which excludes food and
energy, was 1.9% higher than one year ago. January
Core PPI was even
lower. Fed officials generally prefer to look at
core inflation levels,
which exclude the most volatile components like gas
prices and give a
clearer picture of long-term trends. One concern
about the Fed's current
easy monetary policy is that it could lead to higher
future inflation. If
core inflation were to climb sharply, it would
pressure the Fed to scale
back its stimulus, which would not be good for
mortgage rates. For now,
though, there are few signs of higher core inflation
to worry investors.
Also Notable
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January Existing Home Sales increased
slightly from December
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The inventory of existing homes for
sale declined to the lowest level since
December 1999
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Oil prices declined to the lowest
level since the first week of January
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The Treasury will auction $99 billion
in 2-yr, 5-yr, and 7-yr securities next
week
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Average
30 yr fixed rate: |
Last week: |
+0.03% |
This week: |
+0.02% |
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Stocks
(weekly): |
Dow: |
13,900 |
-100 |
NASDAQ: |
3,140 |
-10 |
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This Week
This last week of
February will be packed with economic events. The
biggest news may be Fed Chief Bernanke's testimony
before Congress on
Tuesday and Wednesday. New Home Sales will be
released on Tuesday. Durable
Orders and Pending Home Sales will come out on
Wednesday. Revisions to
fourth quarter GDP and Chicago PMI are scheduled
for Thursday. ISM
Manufacturing, Core PCE inflation, and Personal
Income will be released on
Friday. Consumer Confidence, Consumer Sentiment,
and Construction Spending
will round out the schedule. There will be
Treasury auctions on Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday. Investors also will be
watching Italian elections
over the weekend.
©2013 MBSQuoteline |
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