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July 2007
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Jul. 30, 2007: Mortgages with the 10-yr at 4.76% and some American Home news

Jul. 30, 2007: Mortgages with the 10-yr at 4.76% and some American Home news Rob Chrisman

American Home Mortgage Investment said it is delaying paying dividends on its common stock and may delay payments on its preferred shares because banks demanded it put up more cash after the mortgage lender wrote down the value of its loan and security portfolios significantly. AMH said that the market had caused “major write-downs of its loan and security portfolios and consequently has caused significant margin calls with respect to its credit facilities.” It had $4.01billion of borrowings outstanding under its warehouse lines of credit as of March 31, and total liabilities of $19.3 billion. Its assets had a total book value of $20.6 billion.

 

What is going on out there? As we mentioned last week, although Treasury yields may be dropping, mortgage prices are not improving by as much due to nervousness (including A-paper), but this may change as investors find them a good buy. Or, as Lehman Brothers puts it, “The general lack of liquidity and flight to quality trade will lead to more spread widening in the short term as pass-throughs continue to under-perform other spread products and credit.  Such underperformance is likely to motivate investors to participate in other products, perhaps jumbo or alt a bonds that have become more attractive as the crackdown on subprime continues.  It is a general consensus that AAA bonds are well protected from losses; however, this sector has experienced significant widening as well due to the concerns surrounding the subprime market. In this case we feel that this sector has become relatively cheap because of the attractive pick up in spread.”

 

It could be quite a week ahead for the markets. Not only has volatility already picked up, but look below for the huge amount of scheduled economic news due out. There is nothing today, but tomorrow we have Personal Income and Consumption, the Employment Cost Index, the Chicago PMI, Construction Spending, and Consumer Confidence! Things quiet down, but then on Friday we’ll have all of the employment numbers. The Fed meets again next Tuesday, and the market is giving them a 15% chance of easing. But by year-end the odds have increased to 76% chance of an overnight rate cut.

 

WOMEN’S REVENGE “Cash, check or charge?” I asked, after folding items the woman wished to purchase. As she fumbled for her wallet, I noticed a remote control for a television set in her purse. “So, do you always carry your TV remote?” I asked. “No,” she replied, “but my husband refused to come shopping with me, and I figured this was the most evil thing I could do to him legally.”

 

 

Date

ET

Release

For

Actual

Briefing.com

Consensus

Prior

Revised From

Jul 31

08:30

Personal Income

Jun

 

0.5%

0.5%

0.4%

 

Jul 31

08:30

Personal Spending

Jun

 

0.1%

0.1%

0.5%

 

Jul 31

08:30

Core PCE Inflation

Jun

 

0.1%

0.2%

0.1%

 

Jul 31

08:30

Employment Cost Index

Q2

 

0.9%

1.0%

0.8%

 

Jul 31

09:45

Chicago PMI

Jul

 

59.5

59.0

60.2

 

Jul 31

10:00

Construction Spending

Jun

 

-0.1%

0.3%

0.9%

 

Jul 31

10:00

Consumer Confidence

Jul

 

109.0

105.0

103.9

 

Aug 01

10:00

ISM Index

Jul

 

56.5

55.5

56.0

 

Aug 01

10:00

Pending Home Sales

Jun

 

 

 

-3.5%

 

Aug 01

10:30

Crude Inventories

07/27

 

NA

NA

-1103K

 

Aug 01

17:00

Auto Sales

Jul

 

5.4M

5.5M

5.2M

 

Aug 01

17:00

Truck Sales

Jul

 

6.9M

7.0M

6.5M

 

Aug 02

08:30

Initial Claims

07/28

 

315K

NA

301K

 

Aug 02

10:00

Factory Orders

Jun

 

1.5%

1.3%

-0.5%

 

Aug 03

08:30

Nonfarm Payrolls

Jul

 

150K

135K

132K

 

Aug 03

08:30

Unemployment Rate

Jul

 

4.6%

4.5%

4.5%

 

Aug 03

08:30

Hourly Earnings

Jul

 

0.3%

0.3%

0.3%

 

Aug 03

08:30

Average Workweek

Jul

 

33.8

33.9

33.9

 

Aug 03

10:00

ISM Services

Jul

 

NA

59.5

60.7

 

 

 

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