
Stocks are lower as oil prices continue to spike higher. Bonds and MBS are up as everyone was caught leaning the wrong way going into the jobs report.
Nonfarm payrolls fell by 92,000 last month, which was way below the street estimate of a 60,000 gain. December payrolls were revised down by 65,000 and January was revised down by 4,000. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%. The labor force participation rate and the employment-population ratios declined by 0.1%.
The population was more or less unchanged, as was the labor force. About 185k less people were employed and the number of unemployed rose 200k. About 72k people exited the labor force.
Healthcare and social services payrolls declined slightly after a huge jump in January. Manufacturing was down as was leisure / hospitality. Average hourly earnings increased 3.8% on a YOY basis.
Retail sales fell 0.2% MOM in January, according to the Census Bureau. They were up 3.0% on a YOY basis. This number is not adjusted for inflation, so on a real basis they were up small. The Street was looking for a 0.4% decline so the number was a positive surprise.
Taxes and insurance now account for about 21% of the typical monthly mortgage payment. In some MSAs like Pensacola Florida, they account for 43% of the monthly payment. Places like California and Florida which are seeing more expensive natural disasters have been experiencing higher homeownership premiums. Other states like Illinois generally have high property taxes. HOA fees add another layer to higher costs.
Despite the sell-off in the TBA market, non-QM pricing has been holding in relatively well. This makes sense since SOFR futures are a better hedge than TBAs. SOFR is tied to short-term rates, not agency MBS. Given that we are seeing some delinquencies tick up in NQM, we might see a move in the basis (i.e. a credit move), but that wouldn’t be interest-rate related. Unfortunately basis risk is something secondary folks have to live with and it isn’t hedgeable.
Nonfarm productivity rose 2.8% in the fourth quarter, which was well above expectations and follows a 5.1% surge in the third quarter. Unit labor costs rose 2.8%.
The Spring Selling Season is underway, and sellers are re-listing homes that they took off the market last fall. Nearly 45,000 homes that were de-listed last year have been re-listed. Many pulled their homes off the market because they were unable to get the price they wanted. Despite lower supply, buyers are in a better position these days.
“Homebuyers are already scoring discounts because there are more homes for sale than people who want to buy them, and it’s possible those discounts will get bigger if relistings boost supply further,” said Redfin Senior Economist Asad Khan. “Some sellers will be more flexible on price when they relist since they’ve already been burned once. Buyers shouldn’t be shy about asking for concessions; even if the list price is high on paper, the seller may be open to negotiating.”













