Seeking Alpha
Full index of posts »
Posts by Ticker
Latest Comments
-
Dopamine on How Much is the FED Suppressing Mortgage Rates? Thanks ,good read, good investigating, Im sure ...
-
Economic Disconnect on The Perfect Storm In case it was not clear (I had submitted this ...
-
Economic Disconnect on The Perfect Storm Excellent content. A must daily read.
Posts by Themes
Instablogs are Seeking Alpha's free blogging platform customized for finance, with instant set up and exposure to millions of readers interested in the financial markets. Publish your own instablog in minutes.















How Much is the FED Suppressing Mortgage Rates?
In a tale that goes back quite a while and holds some personal interest for me there was some grumblings today regarding just how much FED purchases of MBS has suppressed mortgage rates over the past year. Some history;
On September 22 this year I penned a missive titled "Corrupted Data Sets". In the post I took aim at claims by Calculated Risk that FED MBS buys were a "minor" effect on rates as absurd. This was the start of my move away from CR analysis, but allow that dates story to fill you in:
There is more in the relevant section of that article.
Later on October 29 I returned to this same item again in a post titled "Distortion of Economic Information" which is very similar to the last title! I wonder why? (Sorry for the long repost section, but very relevant):
That is a lot of things to scan through, but I wanted the proper context for tonight's post.
While scanning around today I stopped over at Calculated Risk because I had seen a WSJ piece which covered this very topic. I was a bit relieved to see CR covering it as well. Here is CR's take:
A bit of a qualifier at the end, but I was glad to see another take on this topic.
Another view of the same speech takes into consideration both MBS buys and Treasury buys which mess with spreads many ways. From Mortgage Insider:
Another view.
I stand firm that the following policy experiments on mortgages have caused a severe distortion in mortgage rates against what those rates would be in a real market:
-FED MBS buys
-FED Treasury buys
-FNM/FRE stuffed to gills with mortgages over last 6 months
-FHA about to bust after taking up the slack
-US government bought over 90% of all mortgages last 3-4 months
If anyone thinks after all of the above a BAC mortgage in 6 months after all these things wind down (in a dream world) will be only 35-50 or even a 100bps higher than now you are as off as can be and are no longer making judgement on reality, but applying half measures using false inputs and pretending they are real. You are party to extend and pretend by doing this.
Economic Disconnect does not pretend.
If you need yet another example of the kind of fantasy land we currently live in, take this great find by the blog Housing Doom which shows how far things are going with no oversight or debate:
Another Treasury Bailout to Assist First Time Homebuyers
Tonight's MUST READ and I strongly encourage you to read the whole thing, but I will excerpt the most relevant hook:
This madness has to end and anyone not willing to confront reality is playing the same games as the FED/Treasury. Who wants to play with them?
Have a good night.
Disclosure: NONE
A Study in Contrasts
Bronte Capital weighs in this morning on the March expiration of FED MBS purchases:
The Ides of March and the FED Exit Strategy
You should read the whole article. It is well written and many angles are thought out. I would summarize (my words) that the writer's idea is that the Banking system will be ready, willing, and able to buy back all the MBS paper the FED took off their hands next year as risk appetite increases, thus making the FED exit from this space relatively smooth. The crisis of last year was one of liquidity, and not solvency.
Now contrast with my post from last Thursday:
Beware the Ides of March (Maybe)
Here I argue that not only will the banks not want the impaired paper, but the FED will have to extend the MBS plan early next year due to severe aversion to these instruments as well as a monster move up in mortgage rates should actual banks offer to by this stuff.
I left a comment at the authors post that we will only have to wait until about February to see which view is more in line with the reality on the ground. Let me know what you, the readers, think about this great study in contrasts.
Thursday Items
http://economicdisconnect.blogspot.com/