The Day Ahead: Wild Cards Abound as Bond Markets Attempt to Hold Declining Support

By: Matthew Graham

Wednesday was relatively brutal in that it marked the first major push below 103-00 for Fannie 3.0s since...  Well...  since the only other time Fannie 3.0s have ever fallen below 103-00 (Granted, they moved to 102-30 by yesterday's 5pm close, but spend the "liquid hours" exclusively over 103, and surely we can forgive a mere 2 tick break.  But Wednesday's break actually shows up on long term charts:

That chart and that pattern of prices is vaguely reminiscent of yesterday morning's chart of 10yr Futures Prices (keep in mind, these are PRICES, so the higher the orange line, the lower the 10yr yield is moving).  Here's the chart:

And here's what we said about that chart: "Notice prices grinding into the longer term trendline, pushed down for 2 months exclusively under the 21-day moving average (that doesn't happen much... last time was late 2010).  Tuesday showed us that there's plenty of room to play around between the moving average and the longer term support (lower yellow line), but a break higher or lower is increasingly likely."

Updating that chart to include Wednesday's price action and we see that "plenty of room to play around" is already exhausted by the sharp-ish sell-off.  

Thus, "a break higher or lower" is even MORE likely in the coming days.  This morning's Jobless Claims numbers are from the same week that the survey for next month's NFP numbers is being conducted.  As such, a big miss or beat could be seen as more meaningful.  Markets are planning on a middle-of-the-road 360k reading.  The afternoon will see the conclusion of this week's auction cycle with 30yr Bonds at 1pm.  Yesterday's 10's caused moderate indigestion, but the auction itself was acceptably sub-par.  30's tend to have a tough time during refunding cycles and we basically need this one to "not have a tough time' in order to avoid breaking the wrong side of of the chart.  Either that or Jobless Claims need to set a strong tone in the morning.  Then again, Europe has been setting the tone in the morning of late (Japan rapidly becoming important as well, but not for European-style reasons), so yeah...  Wild cards abound.  

MBS Live Econ Calendar:

Week Of Mon, Feb 11 2013 - Fri, Feb 15 2013

Time

Event

Period

Unit

Forecast

Prior

Mon, Feb 11

--

No Significant Data Scheduled

--

--

--

--

Tue, Feb 12

13:00

3-Yr Note Auction

--

bl

32.0

--

14:00

Federal budget, $

Jan

bl

-21.00

-0.26

Wed, Feb 13

07:00

Mortgage market index

w/e

--

--

849.8

08:30

Import/Export Prices

Jan

%

0.7

-0.1

08:30

Retail Sales

Jan

%

0.1

0.5

10:00

Business Inventories

Dec

%

0.3

0.3

13:00

10yr Note Auction

--

bl

24.0

--

Thu, Feb 14

08:30

Initial Jobless Claims

w/e

k

360

366

13:00

30-Yr Treasury Auction

--

bl

16.0

--

Fri, Feb 15

08:30

NY Fed manufacturing

Feb

--

-2.50

-7.78

09:15

Industrial Production

Jan

%

0.2

0.3

09:15

Capacity utilization mm

Jan

%

78.9

78.8

09:55

Consumer Sentiment

Feb

--

74.2

73.8

* mm: monthly | yy: annual | qq: quarterly | "w/e" in "period" column indicates a weekly report

* Q1: First Quarter | Adv: Advance Release | Pre: Preliminary Release | Fin: Final Release

* (n)SA: (non) Seasonally Adjusted

* PMI: "Purchasing Managers Index"