
Stocks are higher after investors return from a long weekend. Bonds and MBS are down.
The week ahead is relatively data-light, although we will get the consumer price index on Friday. Given the strong jobs report, a hot CPI reading will get the markets worrying about possible rate hikes this year.
Over the weekend, the two airmen shot down over Iran were rescued, and Trump gave a Tuesday ultimatum for Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz. Oil prices remain elevated and the 10 year bond yield is pushing 4.4%.
Jamie Dimon’s letter to shareholders was released over the weekend. The letter did spend a lot of time discussing how the wars will affect the economy, although he talked a bit about how much the relationship between banks and non-bank financial institutions have changed over the past 20 years.
The private credit market is getting a lot of attention these days, and this is ground zero for the discussion. The letter had a chart showing the change from 2010 (left column) and 2025 (right column)

One thing that jumps out is the nonbank share of mortgage originations. It was 9% in 2010. I guess that makes sense since Countrywide was dead and the new institutions that would dominate going forward were early on. The growth in loans held by nonbanks roughly mirrors the loans held by banks, but the private credit market is now $1.8 trillion, which is bigger than the high-yield bond market and the bank leveraged loan market.
On credit, he said:
I do believe that when we have a credit cycle, which will happen one day, losses on all leveraged lending in general will be higher than expected, relative to the environment. This is because credit standards have been modestly weakening pretty much across the board; i.e., more aggressive and positive assumptions about future performance (called add-backs), weaker covenants, more use of PIK (payment-in-kind; not paying interest in cash but accruing it), more aggressive private ratings (particularly in insurance companies) and more arbitrage (not always a great sign). Also, by and large, private credit does not tend to have great transparency or rigorous valuation “marks” of their loans — this increases the chance that people will sell if they think the environment will get worse — even if actual realized losses barely change. Additionally, actual losses right now are already a little higher than they should be, relative to the environment. Finally, if rates or credit spreads ever go up, the companies that borrowed will have to borrow at even higher rates, putting them under even greater stress. However this plays out, it should be expected that at some point insurance regulators will insist on more rigorous ratings or markdowns, which will likely lead to demands for more capital.
It has always been true that not everyone providing credit is necessarily good at it. There are many players who are late to this game, and it should be expected that some credit providers will do a far worse job than others. We have not had a credit recession in a long time, and it seems that some people assume it will never happen.
I think these comments could be applied to non-QM. We have a lot of new entrants in the DSCR space, and credit spreads have been quite frankly a lot tighter than they should be given the risks involved (specifically no government guarantee). Credit spreads overall remain tight.
The services economy declined in March, according to the S&P PMI. The index came in at 49.8 (any reading under 50 means a decline) which was the lowest level since January 2023. The war and price levels in general are depressing consumer confidence.
“The service sector has slipped into contraction for the first time since
January 2023, dragging the overall economy down to a near-stalled
0.5% annualized rate of growth in March. Worst hit is consumer-facing
service sectors where, barring the pandemic lockdowns, the downturn
reported in March was among the steepest recorded since data were
first available in 2009. However, financial services and tech, both of
which performed strongly last year, have shown some signs of weaker
performance amid financial market volatility and concerns over higher
interest rates, which have deterred investment.
“Key to the deteriorating growth trend is a pull-back in spending amid
worsening affordability, with costs and selling prices surging higher
in March amid spiking energy prices. The survey data are broadly
consistent with consumer price inflation accelerating close to 4% as
firms increasingly seek to push through higher costs onto customers in
the coming months.
















