
Stocks are higher this morning on hopes of peace talks in Iran. Bonds and MBS are up.
The US issued a 15 point peace plan which calls for a 30 day ceasefire. Optimism over this plan is pushing down oil prices. While Iran and the US / Israel continue to be far apart, don’t forget that China needs Gulf oil and will increasingly lean on Iran to cut a deal.
Mortgage applications fell 10% last week as purchases fell 5% and refis fell 15%. Blame rising rates. “The threat of higher for longer oil prices continued to keep Treasury yields elevated, and mortgage rates finished last week higher. The 30-year fixed rate rose to 6.43%, more than 30 basis points higher than at the end of February and at its highest level since October 2025,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Given this period of increasing mortgage rates and diminishing refinance incentives, refinance applications decreased 15% as applications across all loan types declined. Purchase applications were also down last week, as higher mortgage rates, coupled with affordability constraints and economic uncertainty, pushed some potential homebuyers to the sidelines.
Business activity slowed to an 11 month low, according to the S&P Flash PMI. The war in Iran has increased uncertainty and rising energy prices aren’t helping things either. Input costs are rising, leading to the biggest jump since 2022.
“The flash PMI survey data for March signal an unwelcome combination of slower growth and rising inflation following the outbreak of war in the Middle East. Companies are reporting a hit to demand from the additional uncertainty and cost of living impact generated by the conflict. Travel, transport and tourism related issues are compounded by financial market jitters and affordability constraints, notably including concern over the impact of higher interest rates, surging energy prices and supply chain delays.
“The PMI data are indicative of GDP rising at an annualized rate of just 1.0%, with a modest 1.3% expansion signaled for the first quarter as a whole. The survey’s price gauges meanwhile point to consumer price inflation accelerating back to around 4%, hinting at a growing risk of the US moving into an environment of stagflation.”
Something to keep in mind about the Strait of Hormuz: not only oil is affected. Fertilizer prices are being pushed up as supply is choked off, and that will affect food prices. In the US, farmers import about 50% of urea fertilizer and stocks are 25% below normal. Nitrogen fertilizer has seen prices spike 40%. About a quarter of global nitrogen and LNG feedstock goes through the Strait. This will impact food prices, which is the last thing the US consumer needs.
The problems in the US are not only in commodity prices – the private credit issue shows the classic signs of a contagion according to ex-PIMCO chief Mohammed El-Arian. “The proliferation of such headlines increases the risk of what I call the ‘ATM’ scenario: investors forced to liquidate other healthy funds simply because they become the go-to source of available cash—even if those funds are fundamentally sound or operating in an entirely different asset class,” he wrote.
“It’s a classic contagion phenomenon: ‘If you can’t sell what you want, you sell what you can.'” He suggested that the problems we are seeing with Blue Owl and Apollo could be the “canary in a coal mine” like when BNP Paribas halted withdrawals in 2007, which is considered the precursor to the 2007 financial crisis.
Could we see another situation like 2008? I highly doubt it. 2008 was the end of a residential real estate bubble, which is not the case this time around. Yes, real estate prices are expensive compared to incomes, but the vast majority of residential real estate debt is Fannie and Freddie, which means it is guaranteed by the US Government. While there are non-QM DSCR loans out there, they are a very small fraction of the entire mortgage universe. The subprime and negative amortization (remember pick-a-pay loans?) are a distant memory.
Since the investors in DSCR and private credit play in the same sandbox, we could see some restriction of credit there, but it shouldn’t impact Fan and Fred lending. In fact, if the Fed senses that credit problems are spreading in the banking system, it will cut rates inflation be damned. This would cause the mortgage industry to de-emphasize non-QM loans and focus on easy rate / term refis.


















