
Stocks are higher this morning as we await earnings from Nvidia. Bonds and MBS are down.
The Secondary Conference was held Monday and Tuesday in NYC for the last time. It seemed relatively sparsely attended compared to prior years. There was no real exhibition hall – just maybe a dozen tables spread around the elevators on a single floor.
New investors continue to flood into the non-QM space, and appraisal issues are front and center as the hot button issue. Lots of investors are completely avoiding certain counties and property types. The buy side is laser-focused on collateral valuation. Delinquencies are beginning to tick up in the space, which is something to watch.
Pipeline hedgers should be paying attention to SOFR futures as a way to hedge mortgage-based products. They are a great way to hedge mortgage servicing rights and non-QM pipelines. They can also be a good options when TBA liquidity gets lousy. Instead of paying a 8-tick bid/ask spread for certain coupons, you could use SOFR futures to accomplish your hedging goals better liquidity and lower transaction costs.
Eris announced that open interest in SOFR futures has tripled and they are launching options beginning in June. Options are another interesting proposition for mortgage hedgers. When bond market volatility increases, gain on sale spreads generally decrease and being long options can help offset that.
Eris also announced an new funding round as more equity investors get interested in the product. “Buy-side hedgers and fund managers are savvier than ever these days, constantly evaluating how to deploy their capital most efficiently to reach their investment objectives, lest they fall behind their competitors,” said Jared Vegosen, Co-Founder of DV Trading. “Having provided liquid markets in Eris SOFR since inception, we are focused on bringing the same depth, consistency, and pricing discipline to Eris Options at launch.”
Pending home sales rose 1.4% in April, according to the National Association of Realtors. “Buyers are coming out with cautious optimism despite increasing economic uncertainty and a slight rise in mortgage rates,” said NAR Chief Economist Dr. Lawrence Yun. “Demand will easily be even higher once mortgage rates retreat to the levels they were at earlier this year.”
“Historically low foreclosure sales imply minimal price discounts, with a majority of markets selling at a higher price from a year ago,” Yun said. “Unless supply meaningfully increases, home price growth could outpace wage growth and further erode the homeownership rate. All efforts need to be focused on boosting housing supply.”
Mortgage applications fell 2.3% last week as purchases decreased 4% and refis were flat. Rising mortgage rates have been a headwind ever since the situation in Iran began. “Ongoing concerns around inflation from higher fuel costs combined with rising concerns over global public debt pushed Treasury yields higher in the U.S. and abroad last week. This resulted in higher mortgage rates across the board, with the 30-year fixed rate increasing to 6.56%, its highest level in seven weeks,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Overall applications were down to the lowest level in five weeks as purchase borrowers pulled back across conventional and government loan types. Refinance applications were essentially unchanged, with a decline in government refinances and an increase in conventional refinancing, likely as the increase in rates came late in the week.”















