Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Daily Commentary by Larry Baer 2.7.2012


Daily Commentary by Larry Baer:  Trading activity is light in the mortgage market this morning.  Mortgage interest rates are hung in a very narrow range as investors adopt a "wait-and-see" attitude in front of this week's three-part Treasury auction.  Most market participants are hesitant to make any move until the questions regarding a potential credit default by Greece have been resolved in one manner or the other.
As I mentioned in this week's edition of "Viewpoint" - the impact of a Greek default by itself would likely be minimal - but it is the psychological damage such a default could do to market participants' investment psyche that could cause the global economy to slip back into recession.  Until a disorderly financial collapse of Greece (and by extension other weak countries in the euro-zone) is convincingly eliminated as a threat -- global capital will continue to flow into the relative safe-haven of US dollar denominated assets like Treasury debt obligations and mortgage-backed securities - a condition that will tend to be very supportive of the near-term prospects of steady to perhaps fractionally lower mortgage interest rates.
On the other hand, if a firm and viable agreement to save Greece from a major financial meltdown happens to be reached prior to any one of this week's three scheduled Treasury debt auctions - the "flight-to-quality" of European capital into the relative safe-haven of US dollar denominated assets will likely begin to tapper off - resulting in lower prices and fractionally higher mortgage interest rates here at home.  I'll keep you posted.
 
THE MARKET IS ALWAYS RIGHT! . YOU AND I ARE SOME OF THE TIME