The April jobs report was weak with the U.S. adding only 160,000 jobs against predictions of over 200,000 new jobs. But much to the surprise of experts, the U.S. bond market did not see lower interest rates as a result of this soft report. This weak report will make it hard for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates at their next meeting and rates may stay low for longer (good for new home buyers, but bad for savers).
On a related note, Jeffrey Gundlach, the widely followed “bond guru,” openly criticized negative interest rates this week saying that this central bank easing policy is akin to deflation. He, like many, feels that negative interest rates are a bad monetary tool and should be phased out.
Focusing in on the mortgage market, we continue to remain biased toward locking in interest rates at the current levels. Interest rates are low and given that the weak job report in April did not further reduce mortgage rates, we don’t believe floating interest rates on new transactions is wise.