Market Snapshot September 24, 2020

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Good Thursday AM,

 

Stocks bouncing around today and for the moment are up. The 10-yr is flat and mortgage bonds, which have been lagging, have finally broken from the downward channel and are up 16bps. Let’s see where this run takes us, as this could lead to more gains however, even if we see positive movement, I would not expect much to flow through to rate sheets. Jobless claims were higher than expected which is likely giving bonds the lift. The equity markets MIGHT be taking a brief break from all the selling, but I do not think the selling is over and the stock market is now in a downward trend. Hopefully this also gives bonds a lift. For now. It’s likely safe to float but keep in mind the gains will be limited.

 

Loved this from Matt Graham this a.m.,

 

No one is under the illusion that rates should be moving consistently higher after last bottoming out in early August.  The market knows we’re in for a reasonably long haul of historically low rates due to Covid.  The market also knows that the fight against Covid means increased Treasury issuance (for a variety of reasons apart from stimulus) and persistently more effort to stoke inflationary fires from the Fed.  Both exert some measure of upward pressure on rates to offset the intrinsic downward pressure that logically flows from the pandemic’s economic realities.

 

So are the opposing forces a wash?  Are they at equilibrium and is that why we’re seeing the bond market in such a narrow range recently?  Has the Covid economy quite simply removed enough doubt and uncertainty about where bonds should be that there’s just not much point in volatility?

 

If we could only pick one answer, it would be “yes, probably.”

 

But we can entertain other answers for two reasons.  The first is the election.  This one is particularly cloudy for obvious reasons.  Biden may be ahead in polls, but the world already learned not to count out Trump based on polls in 2016.  Plus, a lot can happen between now and when votes are cast.  Even if a trader thinks they know who will win, they can only guess at how the rest of the market will react.  As such, it makes sense to wait and see what’s what in  November.

 

The second reason is the stock market.  It’s in the midst of its biggest sell-off since the post-covid recovery began.  We can see enough intraday correlation that we cannot rule out the possibility that rates would be a bit higher without the stock market weakness.  That’s not to say rates would just move higher and higher without finding a ceiling.  We’d still be in a broadly sideways range for all the reasons that we’re in a broadly sideways range in the first place.  The ceiling would simply be higher than it has been for the past 45 days.

 

aaa marketsnap

 

Please remain safe and healthy, make today great.