
The stock market is closed for Good Friday. Bonds and MBS close early today.
Note the futures markets are also closed today so the table below is yesterday’s closing levels.
The economy added 178,000 jobs in March, which was well above expectations. The unemployment rate fell from 4.4% to 4.3%. January’s payroll estimate was revised upward by 34,00 while February was revised downward by 41,000. This means we had a pretty unusual February, with January adding 160k, February losing 133k and now March adding 178k. Not sure what was driving the unusual activity in Feb.
That said, the internals of the household survey weren’t great. the drop in the unemployment rate was driven by people exiting the labor force. The labor force participation rate and the employment-population ratios declined by 10 basis points. The number of people not in the labor force rose by 488k, and the labor force itself declined by 400k. The number of people actually employed declined by 94k.
Regardless, since the Fed focuses on the unemployment rate, this report indicates that the labor market is not falling apart and makes them more concerned about inflation.
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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.
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The woes in private credit funds continue, with Blue Owl noting higher-than-expected redemption requests. The company has capped redemptions at 5%. “We continue to observe a meaningful disconnect between the public dialogue on private credit and the underlying trends in our portfolio,” Blue Owl said in the shareholder letters.


















