Morning Report: Kevin Warsh telegraphs rate hikes

Table displaying vital statistics including S&P Futures, Oil prices, 10-year yield, and 30-year fixed mortgage rates along with SOFR swap details.

Stocks are flattish this morning as earnings continue to come in. Bonds and MBS are down.

Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh participated in Day 1 of the Fed’s semiannual Humphrey-Hawkins testimony. Here are his prepared remarks.

The members of our Committee have no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation. And we share a resolute commitment to restoring price stability. This was the focus of our June meeting, at which we decided to hold the target range for the federal funds rate at 3-1/2 to 3-3/4 percent.

Naturally, our work at the Fed demands a proper reading on economic conditions. As you see in our Monetary Policy Report, economic activity is expanding at a solid pace, showing resilience in the face of recent developments. Household consumption growth is moderate. Manufacturing output has moved up steadily this year. The housing sector, however, gives a different picture and continues to lag.

Because core inflation is a good guide to future inflation, I am concerned that, if this upward trend continues, it will be hard to push inflation back toward the Committee’s 2 percent goal with monetary policy at its current setting. As I said in a May 22 speech, I am cognizant of the mistake we made in 2021 by not responding sooner to the high inflation we observed, and I am determined to avoid repeating it.2

But the desire to avoid past mistakes is often the author of new ones. I argued in remarks on July 6 that one of the most important jobs of a policymaker is to clearly assess current economic conditions and not just rely on past experience to guide judgments of where policy should be headed.3 As I will explain, there are some crucial differences now compared with 2021, and there is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2 percent goal with policy at its current setting. But I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term.

I am committed to returning inflation to the FOMC’s 2 percent goal but also determined to avoid overtightening policy and risking a recession. Tomorrow’s inflation data will be one of several data releases I’ll be looking at to determine the appropriate path of policy.

I would note the following language: “still a credible case” that we won’t have to hike rates and “equally plausible” case that we will have to raise rates. The body language points to rate hikes in the future unless something drastically changes.

After yesterday’s CPI print, the Fed Funds futures for the July meeting took down their bets for a rate hike. Prior to the number, we were looking at a 40%-50% chance for a rate hike in a couple of weeks. Now it is under 20%. The December futures still see a 82% chance we get a hike this year and a 40% chance we get at least 2.

Yesterday’s low CPI number was driven by falling energy prices, which are reversing a little after the cease fire deal in the Persian Gulf fell apart. Will we see a spike in oil back to $100+? My guess is that additional production coming on line will help prevent that. Energy companies have had enough time to adjust output to rising prices and are almost certainly reacting.

Small business optimism improved in June, according to the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index. The improvement was driven primarily by improved expectations for sales and the economy. Pricing pressures increased however as a net 38% reported raising prices.

“Current economic conditions present small business owners with both
encouraging developments and ongoing challenges. Lower oil prices
provide welcome relief for almost all businesses, especially those that rely
on transportation, deliveries, and other oil-related activities, while also
leaving consumers with more discretionary income. For many owners,
easing fuel prices help offset some of the other cost pressures (insurance,
supplies/inventories, payroll) that continue to stress profits.”

While inflation was mentioned as the #1 problem facing small business (taxes are #2), the comments from companies continued to point to difficulties recruiting employees.

Mortgage applications fell 2.7% last week as purchases fell 7% and refis rose 4%. “Mortgage applications declined as the 30-year fixed rate increased to 6.65% , the highest level since August 2025. Purchase applications were down over the week and dipped below last year’s pace in the week following the July 4th holiday,” said Joel Kan, CMB, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Despite higher mortgage rates, refinance applications increased, led by FHA and VA refinance applications rising 9 and 10%, respectively.”

Morning Report: Inflation falls in June as energy prices moderate

A table displaying vital statistics including S&P Futures, Oil prices, bond yields, fixed-rate mortgage rates, and SOFR swap rates with their respective last values and changes.

Stocks are lower as earnings season kicks off. Bonds and MBS are down as oil rises.

The Iranian blockade is back in the Strait of Hormuz. This won’t be positive for oil prices or inflation, however as they say in the commodities markets the cure for high prices is high prices. New production sources have been coming on line.

The consumer price index fell 0.4% MOM and rose 3.5% YOY. A big decline in energy prices during June (down 5.7%) drove the monthly drop. Excluding food and energy, the core rate was flat and rose 2.6% on a YOY basis. These numbers were well below expectations. Oil is down markedly over the past month.

Line graph showing the price trend of Crude Oil Futures over the past year, with a current price of $79.23 USD, indicating a 20.39% increase and a rise of $13.42 compared to the past year.

Kevin Warsh heads to the Hill for his first Humphrey-Hawkins testimony in front of Congress. I don’t see the prepared remarks out anywhere. It will be interesting to hear questions about Warsh’s proposed task forces and Congress’s view of them.

JP Morgan reported better than expected earnings this morning on trading profits. EPS rose 30% QOQ and 46% YOY to $7.70 per share ($6.14 excluding special items). Revenues increased 15% QOQ and 28% YOY.

Mortgage origination volume rose to $17.2 billion (up 27% YOY). Production revenue fell 3% YOY and servicing revenue declined 9%, however.

On the economy, CEO Jamie Dimon said: “The U.S. economy has demonstrated notable resiliency this year, with stronger business investment and hiring. This strength is being supported by several tailwinds, including AI-driven capital investment, fiscal stimulus and the benefits of more efficient regulation. However, several risks are shifting below the surface like tectonic plates, including geopolitical tensions and wars, sticky inflation, large global fiscal deficits and elevated asset prices. We cannot predict how these forces will ultimately play out. They may remain manageable, but they could also cause meaningful disruptions when they shift or collide. We carefully monitor these risks and prepare the Firm for a wide range of scenarios to ensure that we can serve our customers and clients consistently in all environments.”

Fed Governor Waller gave a speech about monetary policy at a crossroads. In it, he telegraphed rate hikes ahead:

But the desire to avoid past mistakes is often the author of new ones. I argued in remarks on July 6 that one of the most important jobs of a policymaker is to clearly assess current economic conditions and not just rely on past experience to guide judgments of where policy should be headed.3 As I will explain, there are some crucial differences now compared with 2021, and there is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2 percent goal with policy at its current setting. But I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term.

Waller went on to discuss the fact that the dual mandate requires the Fed to pay attention to the headline number, not the core number but chasing oil prices can be an issue. If energy prices work their way downward, this should be good news for returning inflation to its 2% goal.

Morning Report: Big week ahead

Table displaying vital statistics including S&P Futures, Oil prices, 10-year yield, 30-year fixed rate mortgage, and SOFR Swap rates.

Stocks are lower this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are down.

We have a pretty busy week ahead with Kevin Warsh’s first Humphrey-Hawkins testimony, the consumer price index, the producer price index, housing starts and retail sales. We will have plenty of Fed speakers as well. Earnings season kicks off Tuesday with all the big banks reporting.

The US and Iran exchanged fire over the weekend, which is pushing up bond yields and oil prices. The US hit staging areas Iran uses to attack commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Iran attacked facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait.

The Fed has established task forces to address monetary policy. These task forces will address communication, the Fed’s balance sheet, data, productivity & jobs, and inflation frameworks.

“The Federal Reserve’s commitment to price stability and maximum employment is unwavering. As is our resolve to pursue our mandate with rigor,” said Chairman Kevin Warsh. “The U.S. economy has changed significantly over the last generation, and never more so than right now. Each task force will carefully consider whether policymakers’ means and methods, analytical tools and policy approaches can be improved upon. I am honored that the best minds from a range of disciplines have agreed to work with us to sharpen our performance as an institution. The goal is straightforward: to ensure the Fed is best positioned to achieve our objectives in this consequential time.”

One of the big issues facing the Fed is that many of its tools are survey-based and response rates have been falling. The lower the response rate, the lower the signal-to-noise ratio.

Kevin Warsh’s Humphrey-Hawkins testimony will be interested especially concerning Fed guidance and spoon-feeding the markets. While Jerome Powell, Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen were very forthcoming about policy intentions, I suspect Warsh might return to the days of Alan Greenspan, who’s inscrutable answers were his method of deflecting the questions away.

I suspect housing affordability will be a big issue and the Fed’s role in it. Unfortunately, we are at the closing the barn door after the horse has left stage on housing affordability, and there isn’t much the Fed can do about it. The lesson from 2021 is that making housing affordable via buying MBS and driving down rates just makes house prices higher and works against affordability.

The ROAD to Housing Act, which became law in June officially went into effect over the weekend. Trump did not sign the bill because he wanted Voter ID in place and there aren’t enough votes to pass it.

Morning Report: Home price appreciation is picking up again

Table displaying vital statistics, including S&P Futures, Oil (WTI) prices, 10-year yield, 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, and SOFR swap rates with their last values and changes.

Stocks are flattish this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are up.

Existing home sales fell 2.4% MOM in June, but rose 2.8% YOY. The median home price rose 1.8% YOY to $440,600. It seems that home price appreciation is beginning to pick up from the doldrums of the past few years. At the end of June there were 1.56 million units for sale, representing a 4.5 month supply. This is better than the sub-4 levels we had become accustomed to. That said, 6 months is considered a balanced market, so inventory remains low. The NAR affordability index improved markedly from a year ago.

“The back-and-forth in monthly home sales activity, driven by mild fluctuations in mortgage rates, shows how sensitive home buyers are to affordability conditions,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “However, job gains—more than half a million since the beginning of the year—will continue to provide support for the housing market.”

“The median home price has reached an all-time high. Even so, affordability is better than a year ago because wage growth is outpacing home price growth,” Yun continued. “However, progress on long-term housing affordability could be hampered if inventory growth continues to stall. Without consistent gains in inventory, home prices can accelerate. It is critical to introduce more supply to the market to widen the opportunity for homeownership.”

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Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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Home prices rose 1.9% annually in June according to the Clear Capital Home Data Index. . Every region improved on a quarterly and annual basis. After a period of tepid, barely positive growth, home prices are perking up.

The hip to be square trade continues with Rochester NY taking the top spot, followed by Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and Birmingham. San Francisco rounded out the top 5, bucking the trend as AI gazillionaires bid up property values.

Map of the United States showing regional statistics, including quarterly growth rates: West 1.4%, Midwest 3.3%, South 1.7%, Northeast 2.6%, along with year-over-year growth of 1.9% and a distressed saturation of 1.0%.

In the piece, I talk about affordability metrics and specifically discuss the problem with using the median home price to median income ratio. Since it ignores interest rates, it can come up with some misleading data points.

“In 1982, the median home price was a measly $66,400 and the median income was $19,704. With a median house price to median income ratio of 3.5, the boomers would seem to have it way easier than their progeny, who are paying over 5 times. Sure, the median house price was $66,400 and the median income was $19,704, but the mortgage rate was a whopping 17%. The principal and interest payment consumed 48% of monthly income, and that is before property taxes and homeowner’s insurance costs.  Using that analysis, 1982 wasn’t the most affordable year for housing, it was the worst!”

The MP/MI ratio comes up with a diametrically opposed conclusion compared to P&I payments as a percentage of income.

Morning Report: FOMC minutes reveal little. Get used to it.

Table displaying vital statistics including S&P Futures, Oil prices, and various swap rates.

Stocks are flattish this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are down.

The US Treasury auctioned off $39 billion in 10 year notes yesterday, with a bid/cover of 2.59 and a yield of 4.58%. Decent demand, but yields are going the wrong way as the Iranian ceasefire is over.

The FOMC minutes were released yesterday, and they shed light on the new thinking at the Fed. A majority of the participants supported the idea of saying less and becoming more opaque. Transparency at the Fed is really a recent phenomenon that came in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis when the Fed wanted to convince the world it was committed to escaping a deflationary spiral. Things like the post-meeting press conference, the dot plot, economic forecasts didn’t exist prior to that.

On the subject of monetary policy, the minutes gave little indication of where the participants thought policy was headed.

Most participants remarked on scenarios in which inflationary pressures would dissipate and inflation would soon begin to return to 2 percent. In such scenarios, almost all of these participants noted that it would likely be appropriate to maintain or eventually lower the target range for the federal funds rate. Most participants, however, also pointed to scenarios in which, in the context of stable labor market conditions, inflation would remain elevated due to strong AI-related demand, the conflict in the Middle East, or the effects of tariffs. In such scenarios, almost all of these participants indicated that some policy firming would likely be warranted to return inflation to 2 percent. Regarding participants’ individual assessments of appropriate monetary policy under what each participant judged to be the most likely scenario for the economy, many participants indicated that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be within or slightly below the current target range at the end of this year. Many other participants, however, assessed that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be above the current target range at the end of this year. Participants noted that their future policy actions would depend on incoming information.

To recap: Most participants said inflation could fall. Most participants said inflation could rise. Many participants thought rates could go down. Many other participants though rates could go up. Everyone agreed that incoming information is important.

“I like it. One dog goes one way, the other dog goes the other. And then this guy’s saying, ‘whaddya want from me?’ You want guidance? You get oogatz.

A man with a beard and gray hair sitting on a boat with two dogs; one white dog stands on the boat, while another white dog with brown spots stands nearby, surrounded by a natural landscape.

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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First time homebuyers underestimate the cost of homeownership, according to a survey from Credible. A total of 73% of first time homebuyers underestimated the cost of homeownership by about $400 a month. They failed to take into account property taxes, homeowners insurance, maintenance and HOA fees. Many of these fees are rising faster than inflation, which is increasing the gap. A total of 35% of these buyers report not having emergency funds for unexpected repairs.

Infographic showing statistics about the cost of homeownership, including percentages of various generations who underestimated costs and a note that Americans are paying a median of $400 more per month than expected.

This speaks to the education responsibility that we have in the mortgage industry to make sure our borrowers (especially the young ones) aren’t blindsided when they make a purchase.

Morning Report: Iranian ceasefire falls apart

Table displaying vital financial statistics including S&P Futures, Oil (WTI), 10 year yield, and 30 year fixed rate mortgage rates alongside SOFR swap rates and their changes.

Stocks are lower this morning after the ceasefire with Iran breaks down. Bonds and MBS are down.

The FOMC minutes are due out at 2:00 pm today. It probably won’t be market-moving, but just be aware.

The ceasefire in Iran is over, according to President Trump as the two sides exchanged fire. North Sea Brent jumped 5% and the 10 year bond yield is pushing towards 4.6%. “The U.S. strikes are in response to Iranian attacks on three commercial vessels that were transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s demonstrated aggression was unwarranted, dangerous, and a clear violation of the ceasefire.”

New York Fed President John Williams said that monetary policy is in a “good place” and he supports new Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh’s view that forward guidance should be dialed back. “Given the uncertainties that we face in terms of inflation and the economic outlook, trying to give explicit forward guidance about where interest rates are going to be was no longer appropriate,” he said. “The uncertainties are too great.”

Mortgage applications fell 2.2% last week as purchases fell 1% and refis declined 4%. The week included an adjustment for the 4th of July holiday. “Mortgage application volume was little changed during the week of the nation’s 250th Independence Day celebration, as the 30-year fixed rate increased slightly to 6.58%,” said Mike Fratantoni, MBA’s SVP and Chief Economist. “After adjusting for the Independence Day holiday, government purchase volume increased modestly, led by a 5% gain in VA purchase applications, while conventional purchase activity declined. Refinance application volume was down 4%, as homeowners saw little enticement to act with rates still elevated.”

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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The services economy reached a 4 month high according to the S&P PMI report. New orders drove the increase. That said, it wasn’t enough to increase employment.

“A key underlying factor behind the relatively subdued performance of the services economy was again elevated price pressures. Although easing slightly, aided largely by lower oil prices, costs continued to rise at a steep rate in June, driving up rates levied for services. Customer push-back against these high prices was again widely reported, most notably in consumer-facing businesses. Consumer-facing companies are nevertheless reporting that further price falls should help stimulate sales in the months ahead, providing a ray of hope for both the growth and inflation outlooks.”

Morning Report: The services economy continues to expand, while pricing pressures fall.

A table displaying vital financial statistics, including S&P Futures, Oil prices, bond yields, and mortgage rates, with columns for last values and changes.

Stocks are lower this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are down.

Iran fired missiles at two commercial ships, just as traffic is returning to normal in the Strait of Hormuz. So far markets are taking it in stride.

The services economy continued to expand in June according to the ISM Services Report. That said, expansion did decelerate a touch compared to May. New Orders and Activity decelerated, while employment moved from contraction to expansion. Notably, price inflation decelerated (meaning prices are still rising overall, just not as widespread or as rapidly).

“Respondents in June commented less frequently about pricing impacts on petroleum products, while tariff impacts continued to be a theme for increased pricing pressure. The Inventories Index dropped to its second-lowest level since October 2025, indicating that the buy-ahead phenomenon from earlier in the year may be over. The Imports Index dropped into contraction territory for the first time in five months, down from a spike to 55.2 percent in March, its highest level in over two years. The Backlog of Orders Index reached its second-highest level in almost four years. These readings, taken with respondent commentary, seem to indicate that supply chains are stabilizing amid sustained business activity, giving confidence to businesses that selective, yet modest, increased employment is warranted. World Cup-related hiring in the U.S. likely contributed to the increase to the Employment Index. Of the 18 services industries, nine of them — representing over 58 percent of U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) — reported higher employment levels in June. This represents widespread confidence that hiring is again warranted to support activity levels.”

With the energy shock largely over (at least with respect to oil prices) and tariffs beginning to roll off (the 4 month extension expires this month) we should see a marked improvement on pricing pressures, which will hopefully keep the Fed at bay.

The Atlanta Fed GDP Now index sees only 1.3% growth for Q2. Note that the big decline in late June is due to trade balance estimates. Consumption and investment are still at levels associated with 3% growth. In other words, GDP growth will be sluggish, but it won’t necessarily “feel” sluggish.

Line graph comparing the Atlanta Fed GDPNow estimate and the Blue Chip consensus over various dates, with shaded areas representing the range of top and bottom 10 average forecasts.

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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Despite the narratives in the press Gen Z is buying houses and accounted for 1 in 5 purchase locks in the second quarter. Gen Z is still in their 20s, so this is good news. Gen Z accounts for a third of the first time homebuyer loans and 27% of FHA lending. These borrowers tend to have shorter credit histories, which generally means lower credit scores.

It looks like home price appreciation accelerated in June, according to ICE’s housing price index. It rose 0.29% MOM and 1.3% YOY. We are still below inflation, which means that real (inflation-adjusted) prices continue to fall and are now about 5% off of peak levels. As wages increase, affordability will return, especially if inflationary pressures decrease and allow the Fed to hold rates here.

Morning Report: Oil is back to pre-war levels

Table displaying vital financial statistics including S&P futures, oil prices, 10-year yield, 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, and SOFR swaps with their last values and changes.

Stocks are higher this morning on no real news. Bonds and MBS are down.

The upcoming week is relatively data-light as is typical for the week following the jobs report. The highlight will be the FOMC minutes where investors will look for clues about how serious the Fed is considering rate hikes. We will also get the ISM services report and existing home sales.

Non-QM loans are starting to show signs of credit stress, which is unsurprising given that many of the MSAs that rallied hard during COVID are now experiencing flat-to-negative price appreciation and flatlining rents. DV01 reports that 30 day DQs for non QM rose 30 basis points in May, and payment rates are at 4 year lows.

Full doc loans are performing best, while bank statement and self-employment income are struggling, particularly with borrowers with sub 700 FICOs. DSCR loans are performing better than bank statement, but are also showing signs of stress.

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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Oil prices have fallen back to pre-war levels. North Sea Brent is trading at $72 a barrel, right where it was in late February when the initial strikes began. The markets obviously think that the fighting is over and the Strait will remain open. But it also reflects a natural rule in commodity markets: the cure for high prices is high prices. As oil prices rose, well that had lied dormant were re-opened and brought additional supply to the market. In fact, we have somewhat of a glut at the moment, however many governments including the US and China will want to replenish strategic oil reserves.

So why are gasoline prices still high? Gasoline prices are a refined product and no crude oil. The price of refined goods is tracked via crack spreads, and crack spreads are sitting at highs.

Line graph showing the 3-2-1 crack spread over a five-year period, with fluctuations in values ranging from 10 to 70. The graph highlights trends and peaks in crack spread from August 2021 to April 2026.

So why are crack spreads not moving down with oil prices? Refining capacity hasn’t kept up with demand, and many West Coast refineries are shutting down because it is too expensive to operate there. Note Exxon Mobil just changed its domicile from New Jersey to Texas. Also demand for auto fuel is robust at the moment (it is the Summer driving season after all). Diesel prices remain high, although refineries will be switching over to diesel / heating oil production in a few weeks.

Morning Report: Meh jobs report

A table displaying vital financial statistics including S&P Futures, Oil (WTI), 10-year yield, 30-year fixed rate mortgage, and SOFR Swap rates, with corresponding last values and changes.

Stocks are flattish this morning ahead of a long weekend. The bond market closes at 2:00 pm. Bonds and MBS are down.

The economy added 57,000 jobs in June, according to the latest Employment Situation Report. The unemployment rate fell to 4.2%, while the labor force participation rate declined form 65.8% to 65.5%. The two month revision was -74,000. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% MOM and 3.5% YOY.

The labor force fell by roughly 700k, while the number of people with jobs fell by 500k and the number of unemployed fell 200k. So while the unemployment rate fell, it appears that is being driven by people exiting the labor force.

Overall, this is not a great report, and bonds yields are declining slightly. I don’t think this moves the needle for the Fed given that inflation is still above their target, the economy is adding jobs, and the unemployment rate remains historically low.

The manufacturing economy decelerated in June, according to the ISM Manufacturing Report. New orders and production declined, however inflation moved markedly lower. Employment improved.

“In June, U.S. manufacturing activity remained in expansion territory, growing at a slightly slower pace as compared to the month before. Of the five subindexes that make up the PMI®, the New Orders and Production indexes grew slower as compared to the previous month, the Supplier Deliveries Index slowed at a slower rate, and the Employment and Inventories indexes improved with the latter entering expansion territory.

“In June, 34 percent of the comments were positive and 66 percent negative, with a 1-to-1.9 ratio of positive to negative sentiment. Among negative comments, the Iran war was mentioned in 31 percent and tariffs in 17 percent; 50 percent of the panelists mentioned pricing volatility as an issue for their companies.”

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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Announced layoffs fell in June, according to the Challenger and Gray Job Cut Report. Job cuts fell 53% from the prior month, and are down about 4% on a YOY basis. AI was the reason for most of the job cuts.

Line graph showing U.S. job cuts by month from January 2020 to June 2026, highlighting a peak of 671,129 layoffs in April 2020 during COVID-19 and a 3-month average trend.

Technology led all sectors: “Tech remains the epicenter of this year’s cuts. AI is the dominant force as companies are restructuring around it, automating roles, and reallocating budgets toward new capabilities. The sector is being reshaped in real time,” said Challenger.

Morning Report: Home prices continue to fall in inflation-adjusted terms.

Table displaying vital statistics including S&P Futures, Oil price, yields, fixed-rate mortgage rates, and SOFR swap rates.

Stocks are lower after closing out a blockbuster quarter. Bonds and MBS are down.

Home prices were flat MOM and rose under 1% YOY according to the Cotality Case Shiller Home Price Index. The hip to be square trade continues, with the Midwest and Northeast posting the biggest gains while the Sunbelt and the West are posting declines. As inflation is running close to 4%, we are seeing home prices fall in real, inflation-adjusted terms.

“April’s figures confirm that U.S. home prices remain essentially flat, with the S&P Cotality Case-Shiller National Home Price Index up a scant 0.8% year over year, just above March’s 0.7% pace… With inflation accelerating to 3.8% in April, U.S. home values have now declined in real terms for an 11th straight month, further eroding inflation-adjusted housing wealth….The affordability pinch remains a key headwind. After dipping below 6% earlier this year, 30-year mortgage rates climbed back to 6.3% in April, keeping financing costs elevated. In this higher-rate environment, home price growth remains constrained, with housing largely treading water in nominal terms and falling in real terms.”

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Hedging tools for mortgage originators:

Non-QM mortgage origination continues to grow and mortgage bankers need a way to hedge their pipeline or book of closed loans awaiting sale. While TBAs are suitable for conforming mortgages, they are not the best fit for non-QM. Eris SOFR Swap futures and Eris Options offer a liquid and margin-friendly way to mitigate risk. Eris Options recently launched and are already seeing widespread appeal, following the largest roll volume in Eris SOFR Swap futures history, with 842,477 contracts trading the week prior.

Exploring Eris Options? click here

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Consumer confidence improved in June according to the Conference Board. Most of these consumer confidence surveys are really just gasoline price surveys, as that appears to be a big driver of confidence in general. The Present Situation index declined, however expectations improved. Consumer views of the labor market darkened.

“Consumer confidence inched up in June as falling oil prices in recent weeks provided some relief to consumer inflation fears,” said Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist, The Conference Board. “Consumer appraisals of current business conditions were slightly more positive compared to last month. However, perceptions of the current labor market softened measurably as the percentage of consumers saying jobs were ‘hard to get’ rose to 22.5%, the highest level since January 2021 (22.8%). Moreover, consumers anticipate little change in the labor market six months from now. This was offset by improving expectations for business conditions and incomes.”

Inflationary expectations eased, with expectations still above 5%. Note that inflation expectations have generally been quite a bit higher than actual inflation rates:

Line graph showing inflation expectations over the next 12 months from 2007 to 2027, featuring blue and black lines representing average and median inflation rates respectively, with shaded areas indicating recession periods.

Is that a problem with consumers? Or the way the inflation indices measure inflation?

Job openings improved to 7.6 million, according to the JOLTS job openings. Notable increases were seen in manufacturing, trade transportation & utilities, and professional / business services. Government was flat. Finance fell, as did leisure / hospitality and health care / social assistance. The quits rate was steady at 1.9%.

Mortgage applications were flat last week as purchases increased 1% and refis fell 1%. “Mortgage rates eased slightly last week as oil prices declined. As a result, mortgage applications increased modestly, with an uptick in purchase activity offsetting a smaller decline in refinances,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Purchase applications remain ahead of 2025’s pace and have exhibited year-over-year growth for almost three months, as prospective homebuyers are finding opportunities in markets with ample inventory and easing home-price growth. ARM loans accounted for less than 8% of applications, the lowest share since January, as the yield curve continues to flatten with relatively higher short-term rates.”