
Stocks are lower this morning amidst issues in the private credit space. Bonds and MBS are up small.
Personal Incomes rose 0.3% MOM in December and spending rose 0.4%. The headline PCE Price Index rose 0.4% MOM and 2.9% YOY. Excluding food and energy, the index rose 0.4% MOM and 3.0% YOY. These numbers were a touch above expectations, but the data is quite old, so the bond market is taking it in stride. Durable goods inflation rose 0.5% and food rose 0.4%, which were offset by declines in energy.
Fourth quarter GDP rose 1.4%, according to the BEA. This number was way below expectations. The Street was looking for 2.8%, and the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model was at 3%. Government spending was a drag on growth, driven by the shutdown.

On an annualized basis, consumption was up 2.4%, investment rose 3.8%, government spending fell 5.1%, and the trade balance was more or less flat. I suspect we will see a rebound in government spending in the first quarter which will boost the numbers.
The Trump Administration reportedly sent a memo to Congressional representatives, laying out more info on his plan to limit institutional investment in single family homes. His plan would prevent institutions that own more than 100 homes from buying more. The 100 home limit was much lower than forecast – the thought was that he would limit it to 1,000. This would presumably affect single family housing REITs like American Homes 4 Rent and Invitation Homes along with funds by companies like Blackrock.
The plan would include an exemption for companies that build or rehab homes for rent. The House passed a bill that didn’t include the investor ban, however the Senate is still working on one. The White House hopes to insert the ban into the Senate bill. “The President has made it clear that he is committed to signing legislation that truly makes purchasing a home affordable again, and a key ingredient is his popular proposal to ban large institutional investors from purchasing single-family homes,” White House spokesman Davis Ingle said.
Since the bill wouldn’t force institutional investors to sell their holdings my guess is that it probably won’t increase the supply of existing homes on the market much. It will probably encourage more homebuilding in general since that will be the only way for these companies to grow.
The Index of Leading Economic Indicators declined by 0.2% in December according to the Conference Board. “The US LEI registered its fifth consecutive monthly decline in December, indicating continued softness in the economy in early 2026,” said Justyna Zabinska-La Monica, Senior Manager, Business Cycle Indicators, at The Conference Board. “Alongside a rise in building permits, positive contributions to the LEI in December were led by the index’s financial components, with the yield spread notably turning positive in both November and December.
“However, persistently weak consumer expectations indicators and the ISM® New Orders Index made the largest negative contributions to the LEI in December. Labor market data also weighed on the Index, with an increase in unemployment claims and a decline in average weekly hours in manufacturing. Overall, the LEI signals weaker economic activity at the start of this year. The Conference Board projects a slowdown in growth in Q4 2025 and early 2026, with GDP set to expand by 2.1% YOY in 2026, from a forecasted 2.2% in 2025.”
















