Fed Delivers, Financials Flounder
Most of the excitement in Wednesday's session happened in the last two hours of trading after the FOMC decided to cut both the fed funds and discount rates by 50 basis points and a CNBC report suggested downgrades of bond insurers were imminent.
Prior to these happenings the stock market traded in a narrow range, sporting relatively modest losses that were driven by disappointing earnings news from Yahoo! (YHOO 19.05, -1.76) and Merck (MRK 46.69, -1.32), and a fourth quarter GDP report that showed growth of just 0.6% versus the 1.2% consensus estimate.
The GDP report, frankly, wasn't as bad as the headline suggested considering a drop in inventories created a big drag. Final sales, which exclude the swing in inventories and offer a better read on underlying demand, increased 1.9% at an annual rate.
Separately, in a bit of encouraging news, the ADP Employment report showed an estimate of 130K for January private payroll growth. While this report doesn't correlate very strongly with monthly payrolls reported by the government, it has been a decent directional indicator. As such, it sparked some hope that the January employment report on Friday will contain better than expected news.
For the most part, though, the market remain preoccupied with the FOMC decision at 2:15 p.m. ET. It got exactly what it wanted, too, when the FOMC cut the fed funds rate 50 basis points to 3.00% and the discount rate 50 basis points to 3.50%. In turn, the policy directive noted that downside risks to growth remain and that the Fed will act in a timely manner to address growth risks. That acknowledgment was taken as a hint that more rate cuts may be coming.
The major indices rallied in the wake of the decision. The Dow, Nasdaq and S&P, which were all down ahead of the announcement, gained as much as 200, 38, and 24 points, respectively.
Then, the music stopped when CNBC ran a report that one of the two major bond insurers was going to be downgraded by a credit rating agency, perhaps as early as today. As it so happens, Fitch cut its rating on FGIC Corporation and its financial guaranty insurance subsidiaries.
Selling activity quickly accelerated in the wake of these developments and it was pretty much a one-way trade in the final 30 minutes of the session. The major indices all closed in negative territory, led lower by the financial sector, which dropped 1.1%.
The industrials sector, up 0.3%, was the best-performing of the economic sectors on Wednesday, having been propped up by the positive moves made in Boeing (BA 82.87, +1.91) and UPS (UPS 72.02, +1.10) following their earnings reports.
The Gov't cut short term interest rates hoping that the financial market's will improve and they also want to see if the short-term rate cut will affect the spending habit's of consumer's. Keep in mind that the reduction of 1.25 effects equity lines, credit cards, personal loans etc.
If the economy does not show signs of growth in the coming quarter's, we will see interest rates fall to records level's again. Interest rates are currently at a 4 year low and could approach the 2003 level's.
If you know of anyone who might benefit from meeting with me to discuss buying, selling, or refinancing their loan in the next 3-6 months, please let me know!
Sincerely,
Heath Lefort-Personal Financial Advisor
401-461-9987
Mortgage Bankers Association weekly index of mortgage application activity for the week ended January 4, 2008 (Change from the previous week).
Four-week moving averages (change from the previous week):
Trend:Total mortgage demand soared, shaking off the holiday hangover and basking in lower interest rates, registering its first weekly increase in a month.
The purchase index also improved for the first time in a month to its highest level in three weeks.
The refi index which had tumbled 43.7% in just three weeks led the surge with but still fell short of its 2007 high of 2,879.8 for the week ended December 7.
The increases came as the rate for a fixed rate loan fell sharply after three steep weekly increases. At 6.07%, the rate for a 30-year fixed rate loan dropped to its second lowest level since October 2005 (6.03%, had dropped to 5.96% at the beginning of December 2007); the rate for a one-year had risen from 5.46% to 5.53% in the last three weeks of December.
The refi share of all applications jumped to the highest level since March 2004. What it means:
The sharp increase in overall mortgage demand is easy to misread with the noise of holiday shortened weeks, but the near seven percentage point increase in the share represented by refinance applications is the story here.
The jump in refi application activity comes on the heels of a sharp increase in credit card borrowing (in November) reported by the Federal Reserve Tuesday and a decline in personal savings (translation: borrowing) in November, the first since August 2006. The MBA application index still has noise in the background in the form of tighter lending standards which induce multiple applications from borrowers.
Since lenders often look to how applicants handled similar obligations in the past, the applications may not turn into loans with data showing increases in delinquencies in home equity loans and lines of credit. The bottom line remains cautionary for credit card lenders who are often paid off with the proceeds of refinances. That the spike in application activity didn’t come from an increase in purchase applications doesn’t suggest a quick recovery of the housing sector.
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