Thursday's bond market has opened in positive territory following weaker than expected numbers in some minor economic reports and a fairly uneventful morning in stocks. The stock markets are flat with the Dow currently up 32 points and the Nasdaq up 2 points. The bond market is currently up 31/32, which will likely improve this morning's mortgage rates.Neither of today's reports are considered to be market movers, so their results have had little impact on this morning's mortgage pricing. The first was October's Goods and Services Trade Balance report that showed a trade deficit of $57.2 billion. This was much larger than the $53.5 billion deficit that was expected. However, we have not seen this news affect trading or mortgage rates today.The second was last week's unemployment claims figures by the Labor Department. They reported that 573,000 new claims for benefits were filed last week, greatly exceeding forecasts. This is also a 26 year high for new claims, meaning that the employment sector may still be weakening. This is generally good news for bonds and mortgage rates, but since the data tracks only a week's worth of claims it usually does not heavily influence the markets.Also worth mentioning is the 10-year Treasury Note auction today that may hurt or help boost bond prices, depending on how strong of a demand there is in the sale. Results will be posted at 1:00 PM ET. If there was a strong demand for the sale, we may see bonds move higher and mortgage rates revise lower during afternoon trading. However, a lackluster interest could lead to higher mortgage pricing.Tomorrow morning brings us the release lf November's Retail Sales report. This data is very important to the financial markets because it measures consumer spending. Since consumer spending makes up two-thirds of the U.S. economy, any related data is watched closely. Current forecasts call for it to show a 2.0% decline in sales from October's levels. If it reveals weaker than expected sales, the bond market should thrive and mortgage rates should fall as a result. A stronger than expected reading could fuel stock market gains and push mortgage rates higher tomorrow morning.
Mel
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