by Calculated Risk on 1/07/2015 08:15:00 AM
Wednesday, January 07, 2015
ADP: Private Employment increased 241,000 in December
Private sector employment increased by 241,000 jobs from November to December according to the December ADP National Employment Report®. ... The report, which is derived from ADP’s actual payroll data, measures the change in total nonfarm private employment each month on a seasonally-adjusted basis.This was above the consensus forecast for 223,000 private sector jobs added in the ADP report.
...
Goods-producing employment rose by 46,000 jobs in December, up from 40,000 jobs gained in November. The construction industry added 23,000 jobs, up from last month’s gain of 20,000. Meanwhile, manufacturing added 26,000 jobs in December, well above November’s 16,000 and the second highest monthly total of 2014 in that sector.
Service-providing employment rose by 194,000 jobs in December, up from 187,000 in November. ...
Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said, “The job market continues to power forward. Businesses across all industries and sizes are adding to payrolls. At the current pace of job growth, the economy will be back to full employment by this time next year.”
The BLS report for December will be released on Friday and the consensus is for 240,000 non-farm payroll jobs added in December.
MBA: Mortgage Applications Decreased Over Two Week Period in Latest MBA Weekly Survey
by Calculated Risk on 1/07/2015 07:01:00 AM
From the MBA: Mortgage Applications Decreased Over Two Week Period in Latest MBA Weekly Survey
Mortgage applications decreased 9.1 percent from two weeks earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ending January 2, 2015. The most recent week’s results include an adjustment to account for the New Year’s Day holiday, while the previous week’s results were adjusted for the Christmas holiday....
The Refinance Index decreased 12 percent from two weeks ago. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index decreased 5 percent from two weeks earlier ... The Purchase Index was 8 percent lower than the same week one year ago.
...
The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($417,000 or less) decreased to 4.01 percent from 4.04 percent, with points decreasing to 0.28 from 0.35 (including the origination fee) for 80 percent loan-to-value ratio (LTV) loans.
emphasis added
The first graph shows the refinance index.
The refinance index is down 75% from the levels in May 2013.
2014 was probably the lowest year for refinance activity since year 2000 (haven't seen final stats yet). Even with the sharp decline in rates this week, mortgage rates would have to decline further for there to be a large refinance boom - so I expect refinance activity to be low again in 2015.
According to the MBA, the unadjusted purchase index is down 8% from a year ago.
Tuesday, January 06, 2015
Wednesday: ADP Employment, Trade Deficit, FOMC Minutes
by Calculated Risk on 1/06/2015 08:21:00 PM
For fun, here are Byron Wien's Ten Surprises for 2015. Here are a few:
1. The Federal Reserve finally raises short-term interest rates, well before the middle of the year, encouraged by the improving employment data and strong Gross Domestic Product growth. The timing proves faulty, however, as the momentum of the economy has begun to flag and a short-term slowdown has started. The end of monetary accommodation and rising rates precipitate a correction in equities. Long-term Treasury rates stay where they started and the yield curve flattens. [CR Note: I doubt the Fed will raise rates "well before the middle of the year"]Wednesday:
3. The year-end 2014 rally in United States equities continues as the market rises for a strong performance in 2015. A growing economy, fueled by housing and capital spending and favorable earnings, enables the Standard & Poor’s 500 to increase 15% during the year, outperforming equities in most major industrialized countries throughout the world.
4. Mario Draghi finally begins to expand the balance sheet of the European Central Bank aggressively by buying sovereign debt, mortgages and corporate bonds. In spite of this expansion, Europe falls back into a serious recession. Germany is particularly weak as reduced demand from various trading partners has a major impact on its exports. The European policy makers fail to embrace the one option, fiscal spending, that could turn the economy around, and European stocks decline. Politically, Europe moves dangerously toward the right. [CR Note: Unfortunately probably close.]
8. Brent slips into the $40s. The low price of crude oil, which continues throughout the first part of the year, has a major impact on Russia. A peace settlement with Ukraine is signed, giving Eastern Ukraine substantial autonomy but guaranteeing the sovereignty of the rest of the country. President Putin seems to be trying to win back the respect of the international community as the country reels from its economic problems, but the Russian citizenry finally turns on him. His approval rating plummets and he resigns by year-end. During the second half of the year, West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude are both above $70, as emerging market demand continues to increase. [CR Note: Brent into the $40s is already close. Brent closed at $51.10 today.]
• At 7:00 AM ET, the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) will release the results for the mortgage purchase applications index.
• At 8:15 AM, the ADP Employment Report for December. This report is for private payrolls only (no government). The consensus is for 223,000 payroll jobs added in December, up from 207,000 in November.
• At 8:30 AM, the Trade Balance report for November from the Census Bureau. The consensus is for the U.S. trade deficit to be at $42.0 billion in November from $43.4 billion in October.
• Early, Reis Q4 2014 Mall Survey of rents and vacancy rates.
• At 2:00 PM, the FOMC Minutes for Meeting of December 16-17, 2014
30 Year Mortgage Rates fall to 3.68%, Down almost 100bps year-over-year
by Calculated Risk on 1/06/2015 04:09:00 PM
With the rally in the Ten Year today - yields declined to 1.89% mid-day and closed at 1.96% - the 30 year mortgage rate also declined, and is now down almost 100bps from a year ago.
From Matthew Graham at Mortgage News Daily: Opportunity Knocks as Mortgage Rates Surge Lower
Mortgage rates are on an absolute tear. In the past 2 days, they've rocketed a full eighth of a point lower. They're a full quarter point lower than the average rates available in 2nd half of December and .375% lower than December's highest rates. For anyone feeling like they missed out in May 2013 as the taper tantrum began, here's your opportunity. Today is officially the first day we can say that rate sheets are at least as good as May 21st, 2013, the day before Bernanke's congressional testimony unofficially kicked off the taper tantrum and sent mortgage rates quickly higher.Note: rates are still above the level required for a significant increase in refinance activity. Historically refinance activity picks up significantly when mortgage rates fall about 50 bps from a recent level.
At that time, the abrupt rise meant a move up to 3.75% from 3.625%. Today's gains restore 3.625% as the lowest widely-available rate for the best borrowers.
Many borrowers who took out mortgages over the last 18 months can refinance now - but that is a small number of total borrowers. For a significant increase in refinance activity, rates would have to fall below the late 2012 lows (on a monthly basis, 30 year mortgage rates were at 3.35% in the PMMS in November and December 2012).
Based on the relationship between the 30 year mortgage rate and 10-year Treasury yields, the 10-year Treasury yield would probably have to decline to 1.5% or lower for a significant refinance boom (in the near future). With the 10-year yield currently at 1.96%, I don't expect a significant increase in refinance activity.
Here is a table from Mortgage News Daily:
Office Vacancy Rate and Office Investment
by Calculated Risk on 1/06/2015 01:47:00 PM
Yesterday I noted that Reis reported the office vacancy rate declined to 16.7% in Q4 from 16.8% in Q3.
A key question is when will new office investment increase significantly. Investment has been increasing - and adding to GDP - but investment is still very low. The following graph shows the office vacancy rate and office investment as a percent of GDP. Note: Office investment also includes improvements.
Here is Reis Senior Economist Ryan Severino's office forecast for 2015:
"2014 ended with lots of good news and optimistic data, for both the macroeconomy and the office market. GDP growth, labor market growth, net absorption, and vacancy are all trending in the right direction and at a faster pace over time. Barring some idiosyncratic shock, there is no reason to believe that these trends will not persist in 2015 while construction should remain in check due to relatively weak fundamentals in many markets, even as speculative development slowly returns to the market in stronger metro areas. Therefore, we are not only forecasting stronger rent growth for 2015 than 2014, but vacancy compression should slowly begin to accelerate and the potential exists for the market to outperform our expectations if the economy is even stronger than currently forecast. This is the most sanguine that we have been about the economy and the office market since before the recession."
This graph shows the office vacancy rate starting in 1980 (prior to 1999 the data is annual). Back in the early '80s, there was overbuilding in the office sector even as the vacancy rate was rising. This was due to the very loose lending that led to the S&L crisis.
In the '90s, office investment picked up as the vacancy rate fell. Following the bursting of the stock bubble, the vacancy rate increased sharply and office investment declined.
During the housing bubble, office investment started to increase even before the vacancy rate had fallen below 14%. This was due to loose lending - again. Investment essentially stopped following the financial crisis.
Even with the recent increases, office investment is below the levels of previous slow periods - and the vacancy rate is still very high. Like Reis, I expect the office vacancy rate to continue to decline, and for office investment to slowly recover.
Office vacancy data courtesy of Reis.


