
Stocks are lower this morning as the Iranian war drags on. Bonds and MBS are up small.
Nonfarm productivity increased 1.8% in the fourth quarter as output rose 1.5% and hours worked decreased 0.2%. Unit labor costs rose 4.4%, driven by a 6.3% increase in compensation and a 1.8% increase in productivity. This was a substantial downward revision from the second estimate, driven primarily by an increase in unit labor costs.
The rise in labor costs is driven by rising compensation, which is generally a good thing but it won’t help the Fed with inflation. On the plus side, it does work at (slowly) attacking the affordability problem.
Construction spending fell 0.3% MOM in January according to the Census Bureau. It rose 1.0% on a YOY basis. Private residential construction fell 0.8% MOM and rose 2.3% YOY. Single family residential fell 0.2% MOM and 5.4% YOY. Multi fell 0.7% MOM and rose 0.2% YOY.
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said that monetary policy could go in either direction depending on what inflation does in the coming months: “We could be back to the environment with multiple rate cuts for the year, if inflation behaves. I could see circumstances where we would need to raise rates if it was going a different way and inflation was getting out of control,” Goolsbee said. He added that inflation is a bigger problem than the labor market: At the moment, I think inflation has got to be a little ahead of the employment.” Finally he is “fairly optimistic” that rates can move lower this year, although the war has “thrown a wrench into the plans.”
Stephen Miran is more dovish on rate cuts. “Looking 12 to 18 months out, there’s still not enough clarity to think that monetary policy itself should adjust in response to what has happened,” Miran said during an interview on Bloomberg Television. It’s still too early to conclude that the oil shock will bleed into inflation expectations, he added.
“If it looks like the oil shock is bleeding into inflation expectations beyond the first year, then you get really concerned about second-round effects,” he said. He’d also be worried if the shock appeared to cause a wage-price spiral.
Miran also drew a comparison between the oil shock when Russia invaded Ukraine and now. When Russia invaded Ukraine, monetary policy was highly accommodative: “That’s not the case right now. We’re not hitting the gas on demand that would interact with the higher oil price in a way that would reverberate through the economy right now. That’s not the case at all.”
The December Fed Funds futures see no further action out of the Fed as the most likely scenario, and are handicapping a 13% of 25 basis point increase in rates and 22% chance of a 25 basis point cut.

The private equity fund issue continues, with Apollo limiting withdrawals and paying out to investors about 45% of the capital they have requested. “Today’s decision reflects our ongoing commitment to long-term value creation for the Fund’s shareholders,” Apollo said. “As long-term stewards of capital, we have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of all Fund investors, balancing the interests of shareholders seeking liquidity with those who choose to remain invested.”
The private equity meltdown has the potential to spill over to the mortgage market, particularly the non-QM sector. Apollo has a lot of different funds, however it has been a big buyer of non-QM loans.
Mortgage REITs are generally a sleepy sector of the stock market. They are bought more for their high dividend yields than their stock price appreciation. Aside from moments of abject terror like the early days of COVID, they tend to be good additions for investors looking for yield. That is why it is unusual to see a bidding war for one.
Two Harbors is the subject of a 3 way bidding war between United Wholesale, Cross Country and an undisclosed third party. Two Harbors owns Roundpoint Servicing and a portfolio of agency RMBS and MSRs. The stock got caught up in the liquidity air pocket of 2020 with the whole sector and never really recovered. It does pay a fat dividend yield of 12.4%.

















