The first sign of improvement in the fundamentals was a decline in 10-year swap spreads, which fell to "normal" levels in the third week of September. Short-maturity spreads remained extremely high, however, and agency spreads rose last week to a new, exceptionally high level. Today these laggards are beginning to catch up, thanks to the Fed's announcement today that they will purchase up to $100 billion in GSE debt and up to $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities backed by GSEs. This is another in a series of government efforts to break the logjam that has been frustrating the fixed-income market. As I remarked when swap spreads first started to normalize, this is evidence that the government's efforts are gaining traction. As such, I think this is very positive for the outlook for all financial markets, since it enhances liquidity and reduces uncertainty, fear, and doubt.
With the Fed about to become a buyer for agency debt and mortgage backed securities, the yield on FNMA and FHLMC guaranteed mortgages has dropped by 55 bps today, which should mean that 30-year fixed mortgages should soon be available at 5.5% or so, which would be about the lowest rate available in many years. Lower financing costs and lower housing prices combine to produce a signficant improvement in housing affordability, and this in turn offers the promise of increased housing demand on the margin. The sooner prices stabilize the better for everyone.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
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