
Stocks are lower after Trump vowed to strike Iran harder, which sent oil higher. Bonds and MBS are down.
Last night Trump addressed the nation and said that military ops in Iran would be completed “very shortly” however we said the final days would see an escalation where he would hit Iran “extremely hard.”
The markets had been improving lately on hopes that the Iranian conflict would be completed sooner, rather than later. Last night’s speech did not support that forecast.
Separately, Trump has indicated that re-opening the Strait of Hormuz is a problem for other countries to solve. China and India get most of their oil from Iran, and Europe gets a lot from the Middle East as well. The US gets most of its oil from the US, and what imports it has it gets from the Americas – either Canada or Brazil.
The private sector added 62,000 jobs in March, according to the ADP Employment Report. Pay is improving. “Overall hiring is steady, but job growth continues to favor certain industries, including health care,” said Dr. Nela Richardson, chief economist, ADP. “In March, this solid performance was accompanied by a boost in pay gains for job-changers.”
Education / health services and construction saw the most job gains while Trade Transportation / Utilities saw the biggest decrease. Note Oracle just did a huge layoff announcement. Job stayers saw a 4.5% increase in pay while job changers got a 6.6% raise.
Job cuts rose 25% in March, according to outplacement firm Challenger Gray and Christmas. US employers reported 60,620, which was down big on a YOY basis given that the Federal Government was shedding workers at this time last year.

Technology is seeing a lot of cuts due to AI. “Companies are shifting budgets toward AI investments at the expense of jobs. The actual replacing of roles can be seen in Technology companies, where AI can replace coding functions. Other industries are testing the limits of this new technology, and while it can’t replace jobs completely, it is costing jobs,” said Challenger.
“The importance of upskilling and reskilling cannot be overstated. Workers need to familiarize themselves with AI, including prompting and generating assets. Many companies are now including goals for their workers on AI use and redefining job descriptions based on what AI can do.”
“One thing that is clear is that AI is changing work and the workforce. Workers will need to be more strategic as they lead AI-powered agents that handle increasingly complex tasks. Human workers will need strong decision making and judgment skills in the age of AI,” he added.
__________________________________________
Do you have a pipeline of non-QM locks you are looking to hedge? Or perhaps a portfolio of loans sitting on a conduit awaiting securitization? How do you hedge your exposure? A new paper from Eris Innovations on the topic outlines several methods used for hedging this growing market.
Hedging non-QM loans is different than conforming loans because they are not deliverable into a TBA. This means that hedging with TBAs can be ineffective. TBAs are probably better than nothing, but they aren’t the ideal solution. Other methods include using regression analysis to find the correct Treasury hedge, however this method is fraught with potential spurious errors or even non-sensical strategies due to data mining.
Another method hedgers have tried is estimating prepay speeds and using SOFR swap futures to hedge accordingly. There is a wealth of prepay models out there for conventional loans. The problem is that non-QM loans often have prepayment penalties which means existing prepay models are unsuitable, but this method aligns hedges with the hypothetical funding that would hold the loans to their repayment and as such is a very effective method.
The most advanced method is to use a discounted cash flow model using stochastic (i.e. probability) analysis. SOFR swap futures used to build the model are then used to hedge the portfolio. As a more precise method than the first three above, this method can result in the lowest hedging costs, and is the method of choice for sophisticated long term investors, but is equally effective for pipelines and inventory.
If you want to learn more about hedging non-QM portfolios, read this article or contact John.Douglas@erisfutures.com.
____________________________________________
The manufacturing sector continued to expand in March according to the ISM Manufacturing Report. That said prices jumped due to problems in the Middle East. Most indicators fell.
“In March, U.S. manufacturing activity remained in expansion territory, growing at a slightly faster pace than the month before. Of the five subindexes that make up the PMI®, the New Orders Index indicated slower growth compared to the previous month, the Production Index grew at a faster rate, and the Employment and Inventories indexes remained in contraction. This month also marks the first report with panelists citing the Iran war as a new impact to their business, along with ongoing uncertainty with U.S. economic policy, despite the recent Supreme Court ruling striking down International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs. In March, 64 percent of comments overall were negative. Among the negative comments, about 20 percent cited tariffs and about 40 percent the war in the Middle East. (Some panelists referenced both topics within a single comment or in mixed sentiment.)”



















