
Stocks are higher despite oil rising above $100 a barrel again. Bonds and MBS are up.
The week ahead will be dominated by the jobs report on Friday. We will also get job openings, ISM data, consumer confidence and home prices. We will also have a slate of Fed Speakers, including Jerome Powell on Monday.
Consumer sentiment declined in March, according to the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Survey. The index fell 6% to the lowest level since December 2025, due to the fallout from the war in Iran. “These patterns suggest that, at this time, consumers may not expect recent negative developments to persist far into the future. These views are subject to change, however, if the Iran conflict becomes protracted or if higher energy prices pass through to overall inflation.”
Year-ahead inflationary expectations increased from 3.4% to 3.8% while longer-run expectations fell to 3.2%.
Private credit’s exposure to the software sector is bigger than advertised according to research from the Wall Street Journal. Valuations in this SaaS sector have been taken down dramatically over fears that AI will upend their business model.

Many of these funds have put up gates, which restrict the amount investors can withdraw because the underlying investments are illiquid or unsaleable. The funds are massaging their sector definitions in order to minimize perceived exposure.
The risk to folks in the mortgage industry is largely non-QM as some of the ultimate buyers of non-QM paper have exposure to software. Credit problems have a habit of spreading, and non-QM’s proximity means it would be impacted. Any impact on conventional lending would be de minimus and could potentially be positive.
The bidding war between Cross Country Mortgage and United Wholesale over Two Harbors is over, with Cross Country winning. Two Harbors has entered into a definitive merger agreement with Cross Country, terminated its deal with United Wholesale and paid the termination fee.
Homes remain unaffordable in the first quarter, according to research from ATTOM. “Over the last several years, wages haven’t kept up with rising home prices in many markets,” said Rob Barber, CEO of ATTOM. “Mortgage rates dropped throughout last year, which offset some of that growing affordability gap, but shifts in the broader economic environment can still influence rates and home purchasing power.”
During the first quarter, mortgage rates generally declined, with the 30 year fixed rate mortgage falling below 6% before the war in Iran pushed up rates back towards 6.5%. Rising taxes and insurance costs are also impacting affordability. California and New York have the most unaffordable housing markets, while many of the most affordable are in Texas.
















