Wild Ride on Jobs Day as Fed Speakers Steal The Show
Wild Ride on Jobs Day as Fed Speakers Steal The Show
We came into jobs report day expecting some clarity on the size of the Fed's impending rate cut and in hindsight, it's abundantly clear that traders felt the same way. The only catch is that the lion's share of the clarity was reserved for a few short comments from Fed's Chris Waller. The market initially mistook those comments to suggest a 50bp cut, but swiftly reconsidered. In terms of Fed Funds Futures, the volume and volatility surrounding Waller's comments were FAR bigger than the action surrounding the jobs report earlier in the morning. Ultimately, it was a good enough day for rates with bonds holding modest gains.
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- Nonfarm Payrolls
- 142k vs 160k f'cast
- last month revised to 89k from 114k
- Unemployment Rate
- 4.2 vs 4.2 f'cast, 4.3 prev
- Earnings
- 0.4 vs 0.3 f'cast
- last month revised to -0.1 from 0.2
- Nonfarm Payrolls
2-way trading after jobs report with nice initial gains and now some backtracking. MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr down 2.1bps at 3.708
Back to unchanged in Treasuries. MBS now up only 3 ticks (.09). No reason for the reversal in terms of new info/data.
Back to stronger levels now with 10yr down 3bps at 3.698. MBS up 5 ticks (.16).
Well off the best levels now. MBS down about a quarter from highs, but still up 3 ticks (.09). 10yr down 1bp at 3.72, but up sharply from 3.646 lows.
Lots of back and forth, but not a lot of lasting change. 10yr down less than 1bp at 3.722. MBS up an eighth of a point