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NAV / Daily Prices
NAV ($)
11.25
NAV Change ($)
-0.03
Statistics
Hedged Yield to Maturity
4.50%
Effective Duration
6.51 Years
Average Maturity
8.43 Years
Average Fund Credit Rating
AA
Number of Issuers
24
Expenses
Management Fee
0.12%
Maximum Total Expense Ratio (TER) Capped at
0.15%
Initial Charge
NONE
Redemption Fee
NONE
1
# of Funds
Overall
★★★
90
Category
Global Government Bond - USD Hedged
Data as of
31 Mar 2026
For each fund with at least a three-year history, Morningstar calculates a Morningstar Rating based on a Morningstar Risk-Adjusted Return measure that accounts for variation in a fund’s monthly performance (including the effects of sales charges, loads, and redemption fees), placing more emphasis on downward variations and rewarding consistent performance. The top 10% of funds in each category receive 5 stars, the next 22.5% receive 4 stars, the next 35% receive 3 stars, the next 22.5% receive 2 stars and the bottom 10% receive 1 star. The Overall Morningstar Rating for a fund is derived from a weighted average of the performance figures associated with its three-, five- and 10-year (if applicable) Morningstar Rating metrics.
© 2026 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved. The information contained herein: (1) is proprietary to Morningstar and/or its content providers; (2) may not be copied or distributed; and (3) is not warranted to be accurate, complete, or timely. Neither Morningstar nor its content providers are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Overall rating out of 90 Global Government Bond - USD Hedged funds as of 31-03-26.
Returns less than one year are not annualised. Performance does not take account of the commissions and costs incurred on the issue and redemption of shares. Future performance is subject to taxation which depends on the personal situation of each investor, and which may change in the future. Complete information on risks can be found in the prospectus.
Payden Global Government Bond Index Fund is a sub-fund of Payden Global Funds plc, an open-ended investment company with variable capital incorporated under Ireland law and is authorised by FINMA for offering to non-qualified investors. The prospectus for Switzerland, the key investor information documents ("KIID"), the articles, the semi-annual and annual reports and other information can be obtained free of charge from the Fund’s representative and paying agent in Switzerland: Reyl & Cie SA., 4, rue de Rhône, 1204 Geneva, Switzerland.
Credit
Percent of Portfolio
AAA
11%
AA
50%
A
33%
BBB
6%
Maturity
Percent of Portfolio
0-1 yr
4%
1-3 yrs
16%
3-5 yrs
26%
5-7 yrs
13%
7-10 yrs
16%
10+ yrs
25%
Country
Percent of Portfolio
US
42%
Euroland
27%
China
11%
Japan
9%
UK
5%
Canada
2%
Australia
1%
Scandinavia
1%
Malaysia
1%
Other
1%
The conflict in Iran dominated investor attention in March and is likely to remain a key driver of sentiment, with uncertainty persisting despite comments from the Trump administration that the military campaign could conclude within weeks. The principal macroeconomic risk is a prolonged disruption to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for about 20% of global oil supply, which would further strain an already fragile environment.
Despite these risks, our macroeconomic outlook remains cautiously optimistic, with risks tilted to the downside. The US economy remains central to our global outlook for 2026. We believe the current divergence between strong GDP growth and weakening labour markets in the US is unusual and unlikely to persist. In our view, the US economy faces a binary path: either growth re-accelerates as tech-driven productivity gains take hold, or the economy slows towards recession if labour market weakness spreads. In either case, we expect US inflation to continue moderating, allowing the Fed to continue easing at least to neutral and potentially beyond. However, persistent inflation remains a key risk particularly in light of recent developments in the Middle East. Outside the US, most developed economies are expected to remain resilient, with modest growth and easing inflation. Japan is the main exception, where gradual policy tightening is likely to continue. In Europe, however, the conflict in the Middle East presents an added inflation risk, given the continent’s heavy reliance on energy imports.
Moderating inflation and stable inflation expectations should be consistent with negative correlations between interest rates and risk assets. With growth risks tilted to the downside, a balanced and diversified allocation across duration and credit appears well-positioned to navigate uncertainty and a wide range of potential outcomes in 2026. The conflict in Iran is a direct threat to our inflation view, and we are mindful of these risks for the time being. Whilst credit valuations have become somewhat more attractive, they remain elevated relative to historic levels. Greater dispersion across and within sectors emphasises the importance of diversification and strong bottom-up analysis.
Against this backdrop, we prefer to distribute risk in our portfolios in a more balanced manner across duration and credit. We maintain modest overweight positions in higher-quality credit sectors, including investment-grade corporates and select high-quality securitised assets. We also favour greater exposure to duration, positioning portfolios to benefit from further declines in interest rates. Within this allocation, we prefer intermediate-maturity US Treasuries and select emerging-market sovereign bonds. We are also positioned to benefit if the gap between short-term and long-term interest rates grows wider (a "steepening" yield curve), especially in the US and Germany, which we believe could provide some protection in an economic slowdown or if fiscal policies become more expansionary.
In our currency strategy, we hold an underweight position in the US dollar, although less pronounced than earlier in 2025. This positioning is expressed against a diversified basket of developed and emerging-market currencies, such as the euro, the Japanese yen, and the Brazilian real.
FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged
| Total Returns | Month-End (31 Mar 2026) | FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged |
| YTD | -0.13% | -0.14% |
| 1 Year | 2.62% | 2.73% |
| 3 Years | 2.75% | 3.00% |
| 5 Years | -0.38% | -0.16% |
| 10 Years | - | - |
| Since Inception | 1.20% | 1.40% |
| Returns less than one year are not annualized. All returns are net of fees. |
*From inception 26 May 2016 through 31 Dec 2016.
Fund Inception Date
23 May 2008
Fund Share Class Inception Date
26 May 2016
Data as of 31 Mar 2026
Data as of 31 Mar 2026
March was dominated by an abrupt energy shock and the resulting repricing of global rates. The month began with bond markets selling off as the war in the Middle East and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz sent oil prices sharply higher, reviving inflation concerns and pushing investors to scale back rate-cut expectations. Risk assets struggled through most of the month before stabilising into month-end as hopes of de-escalation emerged.
In the US, markets were shaped by a cooling labour market and persistent inflation. February non-farm payrolls fell by 92,000, and unemployment rose slightly to 4.4%, indicating weaker labour market conditions; however, producer-level inflation data releases suggested that underlying price pressures remain firm. Against this backdrop, the Federal Reserve (Fed) left rates unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%, describing activity as still expanding at a solid pace and inflation as “somewhat elevated.”
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz and resulting spike in energy prices further complicated the outlook, triggering a sell-off in US Treasuries and a repricing towards fewer and later rate cuts. In the last days of the month, rates saw some stabilisation as investors weighed the potential growth drag from higher oil prices. The S&P 500 ended the month down 5.09%; whilst the yield on the 10-year US Treasury closed at 4.32%.
The euro area began the month with modest growth and declining unemployment, but a sharp spike in energy prices has increased inflation risks and challenged the recovery narrative. Fourth-quarter GDP was confirmed at 0.2% quarter-on-quarter, whilst unemployment declined to 6.1%, signalling limited but positive economic momentum. However, elevated energy costs have driven inflation expectations higher, reflecting Europe’s particular sensitivity to such shocks. The European Central Bank (ECB) maintained a cautious stance, citing the dual risks of renewed inflationary pressure and weaker economic activity.
In the UK, the February Consumer Price Index (CPI) remained at 3.0%, and the Bank of England held the policy rate at 3.75%, noting that the energy shock is likely to raise near-term inflation. Ten-year German bund yields ended the month at 3.00% whilst ten-year UK gilt yields stood at 4.91%.
The Fund is passively managed with reference to the FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged (the "Index"). The Index is used (i) as a universe from which to select or hold securities; and (ii) to measure performance of the Fund. The anticipated annual normal tracking error (which means the volatility of the difference between the return of the Fund and the return of the Index), in normal market conditions, relative to the Index is 0.05%-0.15%.
This is a marketing communication. Please refer to the prospectus of Payden Global Funds plc and to the PRIIPs KID or KIID before making any final investment decision. This material has been prepared by Payden & Rygel Global Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority of the United Kingdom, and by Payden Global SIM S.p.A., an investment firm authorised and regulated by Italy’s CONSOB with passporting to provide services in certain EU jurisdictions. It is directed exclusively at professional investors or eligible parties and counterparties as defined by the rules of the Financial Conduct Authority or, for EU jurisdictions, by the rules of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (“MiFID”), as transposed in the relevant EU jurisdictions, and is not intended for use by retail investors. Suitability/appropriateness of the investment is the responsibility of the investor, no assurance can be given that the stated investment objectives will be achieved, and the value of investments may fall as well as rise. This information does not constitute an invitation or offer to subscribe for or purchase any of the products mentioned which will only be accepted on the basis of the relevant prospectus. The law may restrict distribution of this information in certain jurisdictions, therefore, persons into whose possession this message comes should inform themselves about and observe any such restrictions. Waystone Management Company (IE) Limited, the Manager, is authorised in Ireland and regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland.
Performance2
FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged
Total Returns
| YTD | 1 Year | 3 Years | 5 Years | 10 Years | Since Inception | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month-End (31 Mar 2026) | -0.13% | 2.62% | 2.75% | -0.38% | - | 1.20% |
FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged | -0.14% | 2.73% | 3.00% | -0.16% | - | 1.40% |
Returns less than one year are not annualized. All returns are net of fees.
*From inception 26 May 2016 through 31 Dec 2016.
Fund Inception Date
23 May 2008
Fund Share Class Inception Date
26 May 2016
Fund Share Class
USD Hedged Accumulating
Hedged
Yes
ISIN Number
IE00B2QPJ058
Ticker
PGVBIUA
Irish Stock Exchange Listed
Yes
UCITS Compliant
Yes
Liquidity
Daily
Investment Minimum*
$1,000,000 Initial
Overall Fund AUM
As of 31 Mar 2026
$975.7 Million
Total Payden Global Fixed Income Strategy AUM
As of 31 Mar 2026
$9.3 Billion
Benchmark
FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged
* The minimum initial investment can be reduced at the Directors' discretion.
Appropriate for investors seeking passive replication of investment-grade global government bonds.
The Fund currently invests in global developed market government debt securities.
Share classes are hedged back to the investor's base currency.
The Fund has been classified as a financial product subject to Article 6 of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (EU) 2019/2088.
An established record of very low tracking error when delivering index-tracking results for institutional investors.
Fund inception date 23 May 2008.
Low total expense ratio.
KIID SRRI: 3/PRIIPs KID SRI: 2.
Passively managed.
Fund Share Class
USD Hedged Accumulating
Hedged
Yes
ISIN Number
IE00B2QPJ058
Ticker
PGVBIUA
Irish Stock Exchange Listed
Yes
UCITS Compliant
Yes
Liquidity
Daily
Investment Minimum*
$1,000,000 Initial
Overall Fund AUM
As of 31 Mar 2026
$975.7 Million
Total Payden Global Fixed Income Strategy AUM
As of 31 Mar 2026
$9.3 Billion
Benchmark
FTSE World Government Bond Index USD Hedged
* The minimum initial investment can be reduced at the Directors' discretion.
Appropriate for investors seeking passive replication of investment-grade global government bonds.
The Payden & Rygel approach to index replication centers on picking appropriate bonds to represent key risks. We assess the trade-off between constructing a portfolio of bonds that track the benchmark, whilst also limiting the number of securities owned to control transaction costs, to maintain liquidity, and at the margin, to reflect relative value. We use statistical and qualitative analysis to find the appropriate balance between minimising tracking error and boosting returns. Ultimately, we strive to match the return of the benchmark with no deliberate performance drift relative to that benchmark.
An established record of very low tracking error when delivering index-tracking results for institutional investors.
Fund inception date 23 May 2008.
Low total expense ratio.
KIID SRRI: 3/PRIIPs KID SRI: 2.
Passively managed.
The conflict in Iran dominated investor attention in March and is likely to remain a key driver of sentiment, with uncertainty persisting despite comments from the Trump administration that the military campaign could conclude within weeks. The principal macroeconomic risk is a prolonged disruption to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for about 20% of global oil supply, which would further strain an already fragile environment.
Despite these risks, our macroeconomic outlook remains cautiously optimistic, with risks tilted to the downside. The US economy remains central to our global outlook for 2026. We believe the current divergence between strong GDP growth and weakening labour markets in the US is unusual and unlikely to persist. In our view, the US economy faces a binary path: either growth re-accelerates as tech-driven productivity gains take hold, or the economy slows towards recession if labour market weakness spreads. In either case, we expect US inflation to continue moderating, allowing the Fed to continue easing at least to neutral and potentially beyond. However, persistent inflation remains a key risk particularly in light of recent developments in the Middle East. Outside the US, most developed economies are expected to remain resilient, with modest growth and easing inflation. Japan is the main exception, where gradual policy tightening is likely to continue. In Europe, however, the conflict in the Middle East presents an added inflation risk, given the continent’s heavy reliance on energy imports.
Moderating inflation and stable inflation expectations should be consistent with negative correlations between interest rates and risk assets. With growth risks tilted to the downside, a balanced and diversified allocation across duration and credit appears well-positioned to navigate uncertainty and a wide range of potential outcomes in 2026. The conflict in Iran is a direct threat to our inflation view, and we are mindful of these risks for the time being. Whilst credit valuations have become somewhat more attractive, they remain elevated relative to historic levels. Greater dispersion across and within sectors emphasises the importance of diversification and strong bottom-up analysis.
Against this backdrop, we prefer to distribute risk in our portfolios in a more balanced manner across duration and credit. We maintain modest overweight positions in higher-quality credit sectors, including investment-grade corporates and select high-quality securitised assets. We also favour greater exposure to duration, positioning portfolios to benefit from further declines in interest rates. Within this allocation, we prefer intermediate-maturity US Treasuries and select emerging-market sovereign bonds. We are also positioned to benefit if the gap between short-term and long-term interest rates grows wider (a "steepening" yield curve), especially in the US and Germany, which we believe could provide some protection in an economic slowdown or if fiscal policies become more expansionary.
In our currency strategy, we hold an underweight position in the US dollar, although less pronounced than earlier in 2025. This positioning is expressed against a diversified basket of developed and emerging-market currencies, such as the euro, the Japanese yen, and the Brazilian real.
Credit
Percent of Portfolio
AAA
11%
AA
50%
A
33%
BBB
6%
Maturity
Percent of Portfolio
0-1 yr
4%
1-3 yrs
16%
3-5 yrs
26%
5-7 yrs
13%
7-10 yrs
16%
10+ yrs
25%
Country
Percent of Portfolio
US
42%
Euroland
27%
China
11%
Japan
9%
UK
5%
Canada
2%
Australia
1%
Scandinavia
1%
Malaysia
1%
Other
1%