Anonymous ID: 159091 March 2, 2023, 7:35 p.m. No.18437202   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7303 >>7631 >>7709

>>18434694 pb

PF: SAM296 C-40B stopped at Tel Aviv (surprise!…./s) for about 2h30m and now at Aqaba, Jordan

>and prolly to Tel Aviv or Gulf

Lets see: Rome then Tel Aviv and now Aqaba…nope nuffin to see here

 

Hamas official calls Aqaba summit 'worst sin of Arab states at this stage'

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20230302-hamas-calls-aqaba-summit-worst-sin-of-arab-states-at-this-stage/

 

Those C-130ls CHEAT21 and 22 =43 and PUMA60,62 went to MacDill (CENTCOM) and not Tyndall

Anonymous ID: 159091 March 2, 2023, 7:52 p.m. No.18437290   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7303 >>7631 >>7709

GORDO15 E-4B Nightwatch finished a refueling exercise with EDDIE63 KC-135 tanker over Kentucky-GORDO back to Offut and EDDIE back to Columbus, OH

 

SAM341 G3 ES back to JBA from Offut AFB (STRATCOM) depart after a 1h ground stop and not hanging around-over 600kts

 

>>18433961pb

German AF GAF907 A350 landed at Dulles Int'l-not JBA about three hrs agoPM Scholzarrived for meeting with Potato tomorrow

 

German AF GAF689 GLEX went to Wichita Falls, TX after it's 1h stop at Niagara Falls Int'l earlier today

Anonymous ID: 159091 March 2, 2023, 8:02 p.m. No.18437337   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7518

Mortgage Rates Now Back Above 7%

 

Mortgage rates have been hit hard on two fronts over the past month. The first front is the obvious one: the bond market has moved in a way that forces rates to go higher. To be fair, it's ~~almost~~ FIFY always the bond market that forces rates to go wherever they're going.

 

A vast majority of the day-to-day movement in rates is a simple function of the trading levels in specific bonds. This has been and will continue to be the case, possibly forever. February (and now early March) economic data caused traders to worry about higher inflation and resilient economic growth. This makes traders want to sell bonds more than buy them, and that results in higher interest rates. But bonds aren't always everything when it comes to rate movement. The "everything else" category changes in composition depending on the landscape. For instance, during the 2020-2021 refi booms, rates were often limited by mortgage lenders' capacity to handle new business. The bond market actually allowed for much lower rates at times, but lenders simply couldn't handle the volume. There's a different problem in the "everything else" category right now. The regulator overseeing Fannie and Freddie recently changed some of the upfront fees required for all conforming mortgages (conforming = guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie). Depending on a borrower's credit score and the amount of a home's value they wish to borrow, their rate could instantly rise by 0.125% simply because a lender implemented the new fee requirements.

 

Without the impact of those fees, rates could still be in the high 6% range, or close to it. As it stands, the average lender is now back up into the low 7's for a well-qualified 30yr fixed scenario. These aren't the highest levels we've seen during this cycle, but they are the highest in more than 4 months (and not too far away from the long-term highs just under 7.4%). Incidentally, Freddie Mac's rate survey came out today and it showed 30yr fixed rates at 6.65. Understand that most of Freddie's survey responses come in on Monday and rates have risen since then. The survey also includes upfront points and does not include the new fees that are hitting a vast majority of borrowers. If we were to adjust for the market movement that's happened since Monday, the upfront costs, and the fees, Freddie's number would likely be right in line with 7.1%.

https://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/markets/mortgage-rates-03022023

 

And the NYFRB buying $Bs in MBS (they stopped in Sept 2022) had no effect whatsoever…/s

 

>>18417037 pb Economic Schedule for Week of February 26, 2023-expect some really shitty data points in housing, autos, retail