
Stocks are lower this morning as hostilities continue in the Middle East. Bonds and MBS are down again.
Part of the problem in the bond market is being driven by fears of rate hikes in Europe. The German Bund yield (sort of the benchmark for Euro rates) is at a 15 year high. The move follows comments from ECB President Christine Lagarde that the Central Bank was prepared to raise rates if inflation spikes in response to the situation in Iran.
Note that we are seeing movement in the Fed Funds futures market. The December Fed Funds futures are handicapping a 51% chance that rates stay the same, and a 49% chance that the Fed hikes rates:

Fed Governor Michael Barr said that the Fed is in a good place with respect to monetary policy.
At the same time, a key concern right now is the trajectory for inflation. Separate from the effects of tariffs on goods inflation, nonhousing services inflation has also remained elevated. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices and is a good guide to future inflation, likely was 3 percent in February, about where it was a year ago. The longer inflation remains above 2 percent, the greater the risk that it becomes entrenched in expectations, making it harder to achieve the FOMC’s goal.
Given the considerable uncertainty about the potential effects of developments in the Middle East on our economy, as well as the other factors I mentioned, it makes sense to take some time to assess conditions. Our current policy stance puts us in a good place to hold steady while we evaluate incoming data, the evolving forecast, and the balance of risks.
Prepay speeds and delinquencies increased in February, according to the ICE First Look. At the end of the month, 878,000 loans were seriously delinquent or in foreclosure, which is the highest level since June of 2022. This number is up 25% over the past 4 months. Foreclosure rates are coming off the pandemic-driven lows.
“February saw a clear rebound in prepayment activity, with speeds rising 14% month over month and 80% year over year as the wave of refinances triggered by lower rates in January reached closing,” said Andy Walden, Head of Mortgage and Housing Market Research at ICE. “Delinquencies also edged higher, driven by seasonal increases in early-stage delinquencies and a notable rise in seriously past-due loans, though overall delinquency rates remain below pre-pandemic levels. These dynamics bear watching in the coming months, as default activity continues to trend off recent record lows.”
DV01 reported a big increase in non-QM delinquencies. Total impairments were up 60 bps to 7.4%. Overall new DQs rose to 1.5%, while cure rates fell 180 bp to 20%. Payment made rates fell 160 bp to 42.4%.
Between the performance of NQM lending and the issues in the private equity market, the credit markets will not be amenable to an increase in rates.















