
Stocks are higher this morning as earnings continue to come in. Bonds and MBS are down.
Friday’s jobs report will be delayed due to the partial government shutdown. “The Employment Situation release for January 2026 will not be released as scheduled on Friday, February 6, 2026. The release will be rescheduled upon the resumption of government funding,” Emily Liddel, associate commissioner of the BLS, said in a statement.
The Senate has passed a funding measure however it remains held up in the House. House Democrats want ICE reined in and are using the bill as leverage. Some Republicans are holding out because they want voter ID put into the bill.
The manufacturing economy expanded in January, according to the ISM Manufacturing Report. The index rose to 52.6 (any number over 50 indicates expansion) after 26 straight months of contraction. The number was higher than Wall Street analysts expected, driven by a huge jump in new orders. December saw a big decline in new orders, so the rebound may have been a “catch-up” phenomenon.
Inventory levels remain low, which is generally a good sign for the economy because it signals future production will be needed to meet demand. Prices also increased, which isn’t helpful for the Fed’s inflation-fighting mission. Employment is still in contraction mode as companies continue to manage headcount as opposed to hiring new workers.
The comments from manufacturers revolve around tariff uncertainty, however the rebound in the index is a good signal for the economy.
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New Feature: Expanded Market Data with SOFR Swaps
You’ll notice our daily market data now includes SOFR swap rates, provided by Eris Innovations. These rates are derived from Eris SOFR Swap futures (native CME Group contracts), offering a transparent view of long-term rates.
Why this matters for your workflow: Since SOFR replaced LIBOR, it has become the universal benchmark for financing. Using SOFR swaps—rather than Treasuries—for modeling and hedging offers several advantages:
- Capital Efficiency: Swap futures require significantly less balance sheet than cash instruments.
- Precision Hedging: Liquid across the curve (out to 30 years), they allow you to isolate benchmark interest rate risk from credit spread exposure.
- Strategic Utility: Already widely used for hedging MSR portfolios, but they are also becoming the instrument of choice for hedging ARMs, non-QM, RTL, and key rate duration for Agency mortgage portfolios.
By benchmarking against SOFR, and easily trading this with Eris SOFR Swap futures, investors can more effectively monitor the “pure” credit spread of their mortgage assets, which can then be separately managed using Mortgage TBAs. Contact john.douglas@erisfutures.com to learn how Eris SOFR can help you improve your execution.
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US population growth slowed in 2025, according to the Census Bureau. The population grew at 0.5%, about half the growth rate of 2024. This was the lowest rate since 2021 when it grew at 0.2%. Immigration (or net migration to be more precise) was the driver of decrease as enforcement at the border resumed. We saw a similar decline during the first Trump Administration, followed by a bump during the Biden admin, and now net migration is falling again.

An under-appreciated driver of affordability is taxes and insurance (T&I) payments. For decades, the T&I aspect of the mortgage payment was more or less an afterthought as the principal and interest (P&I) portion accounted for the vast majority of the payment. No longer.
In Florida, escrow payment have risen 70% over the past 5 years, with T&I now accounting for 38% of the mortgage payment. On average, escrow payments have increased 45%, driven primarily by rising insurance costs.
“Escalating escrow costs are reshaping the financial reality of homeownership across the U.S.,” says Cotality Principal Economist Archana Pradhan. “This financial strain can deter many from entering the housing market, ultimately affecting their ability to achieve homeownership. At the same time, existing homeowners are getting squeezed, especially those who are on fixed incomes or tight budgets.”
Something to keep in mind when looking at payment-to-income ratios since rising costs can make a mortgage which looks affordable now unaffordable in a few years. This is also why you are seeing seniors flee Florida. It is no longer cheap and people on fixed income cannot handle the uncertainty of rising costs.

















