Mortgage Rates Rise as Bonds Fall: A Critical Investor Input

Real Estate Review and Preview: Late May Investor Must-Knows

(Continued from Prior Part)

Mortgage rates are a critical input to the housing market

Mortgage rates are the lifeblood of the housing market. The Fed’s plan to help housing began by pushing rates lower to allow people to refinance. The central bank also hoped that lowering mortgage rates would support home prices.

The government’s focus now is to draw first-time homebuyers into the market. The government has been announcing measures to increase credit availability for first-time homebuyers. We’ll see if the changes actually affect buying patterns.

Mortgage rates finally acknowledge the bond market sell-off

Mortgage rates have tended to “fade” the big moves in the bond market lately. When rates dip well below 1.9% on the ten-year, mortgage rates move lower only very reluctantly. When rates increase to 2.3%, mortgage rates have tended to move up only grudgingly. Last week, the ten-year bond yield increased 7 basis points, and mortgage rates rose from 3.85% to 3.9%.

As a general rule, mortgage rates are somewhat stabler than bond yields. When we see big outsized moves in the bond markets, mortgage rates tend to lag the move.

Effect on mortgage REITs

Mortgage bankers like Nationstar Mortgage Holdings (NSM) are in a position to perhaps wring out a good 2015 after a dismal 2014. Certainly, the MBA (Mortgage Bankers Association) mortgage banking indices suggest an improvement.

If rates continue to fall, you should start seeing prepayments accelerate. Lately, it’s not until rates hit the 3.8% level that prepays start kicking in. REITs that focus on agency mortgage-backed securities (or MBS), like MFA Financial (MFA) and American Capital Agency (AGNC), will have to deal with the combination of lower rates and increased prepayment speeds if mortgage rates fall back toward the lows.

Investors interested in trading in the mortgage REIT sector through an ETF should look at the iShares Mortgage Real Estate Fund (REM). Investors interested in making directional bets on interest rates should look at the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT).

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