TAKE ME HOME FROM THE BALLGAME… It was a week of Visine drops
and extra coffee for millions who stayed up late to watch the baseball playoffs.
Two rare Game 7 extravaganzas capped off some terrific late night excitement
with the Red Sox and Cardinals emerging victorious. Also grabbing a fair share
of the headlines is the race for the Presidency...and the mud-slinging continues
to fly faster than a Pedro Martinez fastball.
But the Fox Sports Network ratings weren’t the only things moving up last
week – oil prices continued their relentless climb, hitting new record highs and
pushing the price per gallon of gasoline above $2.
The Yankees might be the only ones who had a worse week than the stock
market, which was battered for huge losses. Historically, October is a bad month
for stocks. True to form, the Dow is indeed having a very bad October, with the
index falling an ugly 315 points. The weakness in stocks helped Mortgage
Bonds reach their best levels in almost seven months, which in turn helped home
loan rates improve slightly.
SO WE KNOW THAT BASEBALL PLAYERS ARE AMONG THE HIGHEST PAID PEOPLE
IN THE COUNTRY… BUT SPEAKING OF TOP EARNERS – DO YOU KNOW HOW MUCH OF OVERALL
TAXES THE TOP 1% OF INCOME EARNERS PAY? THE RESULTS MAY SHOCK YOU. DON’T MISS
THIS WEEK’S MORTGAGE MARKET VIEW.
Forecast For The Week
Let’s take a look at what we can expect for home loan rates this week. Now
although Mortgage Bonds and home loan rates have some negative forces working
against them – such as Bonds being very “overbought” and running into tough
technical resistance – there are also several factors in play that should help
Mortgage Bonds and home loan rates. As stocks do poorly, bonds typically
improve, causing home loan rates to improve. Stocks loathe uncertainty, and
there has been plenty of uncertainty of late… the Presidential race is up for
grabs, as well as oil continuing to trade near all-time highs. This uncertain
enviroment will not likely be lifted until after the Presidential Election… so
home loan rates should be steady to slightly improved in the
near-term.
On a technical level, Mortgage Bonds currently have many underlying “floors
of support”. Seen in the chart below, these numerous floors of support should
help Bonds retain their current levels unless some surprisingly strong economic
or inflationary news hits the wire this week.
Chart: Fannie Mae 5.5% Mortgage Bond (Friday October 22, 2004)
The Mortgage Market View…
“THE HARDEST THING IN THE WORLD TO UNDERSTAND IS THE INCOME
TAX”. Who said it? Albert Einstein. And beyond being often tougher to
decipher than quantum physics… and a heated topic this election season… is the
Tax system really fair?
Take a look at the latest numbers:
The top 1% of income earners… those who earned over $285,400… paid 34% of
all federal income taxes in 2002. Much higher proportionately than the 16% of
total income they earned.
The top 5% earned $126,500 and paid 54% of taxes, while earning 31% of
total income.
The top 10% of taxpayers earned $92,600 in 2002. They paid 66% of the tax
burden while earning 42% of all income.
The bottom 50% of filers paid just 3.5% of income taxes in 2002. They made
14.2% of all income.
The Week's Economic Indicator Calendar
The economic calendar expands this week with a nice assortment of mid and
higher-level reports, including Existing and New Home Sales.
Remember, as a general rule, weaker than expected economic data is good
for rates, while positive data causes rates to rise.