
Stocks are higher this morning after oil reversed course yesterday. Bonds and MBS are up.
The G7 had a call yesterday about releasing reserves to help calm the oil markets. This was the catalyst to reverse the dramatic rise in prices. The US has offered political risk insurance for ships traversing the strait, and it appears (if the rumors are correct) that we are seeing ship traffic return.
Trump had a press conference last night about the situation saying that it will be over soon. The Iranian Navy is pretty much out of commission, and drone attacks are declining. I am not sure that Trump will follow the Colin Powell policy of “you break it, you buy it” with respect to Iran. Trump wants to avoid the mistakes of Afghanistan and Iraq – getting mired in a situation with troops on the ground.
The Ayatollah’s son has been named as Supreme Leader, and Iran has problems outside of the US / Israel military strikes. The Iranian Rial has devalued massively against global currencies, the revolutionary push will probably continue, and Iran needs to sell oil in order to support its economy. Without a government, there is no one to negotiate with, so I think the plan is to see what forms and then take it from there.
House prices fell 0.5% quarterly and rose 1.7% annually, according to the Clear Capital Home Data Index. The Northeast was flat on a quarterly basis, while the West, Midwest and the South were negative. Of the top 15 MSAs, 10 experienced positive quarterly growth, and five had negative growth. The Northeast is the last holdout still exhibiting nonnegative growth.

In the commentary, I talk about the nascent credit issues we are seeing in private equity and how that could affect mortgage rates and home prices.
Small business optimism declined in February, according to the NFIB. Net sales and employment improved, while capital expenditures fell. Compensation increased. Government regulations and red tape were mentioned as the single biggest problem, with insurance as the second. The third was competition from large businesses. That might be tariff-related as bigger businesses can absorb price shocks easier than smaller businesses.
Recently released government data are framing economic conditions as a mixed picture with solid GDP estimates and employment reports that move wildly monthly to month. When the government hires 100 workers, GDP goes up. When GM hires 100 workers, GDP goes up. GDP counts the values of all goods and services produced in the US, government and private alike. From 2020 to 2024, job growth and GDP were boosted by increases in government employment and spending, but that trend has now reversed. This will lead to some decline in the job numbers. While private sector capital spending does raise GDP by producing lots of stuff, feeling the impact of that spending may take some time as the new investments are put to work. The process is simple: Give employees better tools to do their jobs and output per hour rises. Salaries rise and fewer workers are needed, freeing up employees to apply their skills elsewhere. Capital spending has not been particularly strong for small businesses, but what they buy is undoubtedly more productive. Robots and AI will continue to increase worker productivity, especially in the small business sector.
Mortgage credit availability increased in February, according to the MBA. “Lenders increased mortgage credit supply last month, particularly for refinancing, as mortgage rates moved lower in January and February. Most of last month’s supply growth was in loan programs that allowed for cash-out refinance and on investor homes, although these were still limited to lower LTV borrowers,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s vice president and deputy chief economist. “The jumbo index increased by 3% for the second straight month, again driven by growth in non-QM loan programs. The government index was the only component that saw a decline in credit supply over the month, as lenders likely tightened underwriting standards given the recent increase in FHA mortgage delinquency rates.”













