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NAV / Daily Prices
NAV ($)
9.24
NAV Change ($)
-0.01
Change %
-0.11%
MTD Return
-2.12%
YTD Return
Statistics
30-Day SEC YieldA
3.61%
30-Day SEC Yield (Unsubsidized)B
3.62%
Average Maturity
5.90 Years
Effective DurationC
6.14 Years
Expenses
Total Fund Operating Expenses
0.80%D
| Total Returns | Month-End (02/28/2026) | Quarter-End (12/31/2025) |
| YTD | 1.86% | 7.41% |
| 1 Year | 6.47% | 7.41% |
| 3 Year |
The 30-day SEC yield represents the dividends and interest earned for a 30-day period, annualized, and divided by the net asset values per share at the end of the period. The SEC yield is computed under a standardized formula which assumes all portfolio securities are held to maturity. This value may differ from the actual distribution rate of the fund.
Represents a 30-day SEC yield without adjusting for fee waivers or expense reimbursements.
Effective duration is a measure of the Fund’s price sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses include all direct operating expenses of the Fund, as well as 0.02% Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses incurred indirectly by the Fund through its investment in other mutual funds and a Rule 12b-1 Distribution Fee of 0.25%.
Quoted performance data represent past performance, which does not guarantee future results. Investment returns and principal value will fluctuate, so investors' shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost. For the most recent month-end performance, which may be higher or lower than that quoted, select this link or call 800 572-9336.
Returns less than one year are not annualized.
Mutual funds are required by the IRS to distribute substantially all realized profits they earn to shareholders on at least an annual basis. If a fund has net gains from the sale of securities, or if it earns dividends or interest from securities, the fund must distribute those earnings to its shareholders. All distributions are taxable, unless an investor's shares are held in a tax-deferred or tax-exempt account such as an IRA. Payden shareholders have the option to receive their distributions in cash or to automatically reinvest the distribution back into the Fund. This information is not intended to provide tax advice. Please consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your circumstances. Dividends shown are historical and not guaranteed. Amounts may vary and do not predict future income.
Duration
Percent of Portfolio
0-1 yr
15%
1-3 yrs
18%
3-5 yrs
26%
5-7 yrs
24%
7-10 yrs
12%
10+ yrs
Credit
Percent of Portfolio
AAA
14%
AA
41%
A
11%
BBB
24%
BB
6%
B
5%
2%
Unrated
2%
| 5.64% |
| 5.37% |
| 5 Year | 0.67% | -0.06% |
| 10 Year | 2.28% | 2.17% |
| Since Inception | 2.86% | 2.77% |
DividendsG
Dividend
$0.0254
Dividend Reinvest NAV
$9.42
Record Date
02/25/2026
Ex Date
02/26/2026
Payable Date
02/26/2026
Dividends Paid
Monthly
Capital GainsG
Short Term
None
Long Term
None
Reinvest NAV
None
Record Date
N/A
Ex Date
N/A
Payable Date
N/A
Investor Class - Regular Account
$100,000
Adviser Class - Regular Account
$5,000
SI Class
$10,000,000
Investor Class - IRA Account
$100,000
Adviser Class - IRA Account
$2,000
Additional Investment - All Classes
$250
Fund Inception Date
12/31/1993
Share Class Inception Date
11/02/2009
Share Class
Adviser Class
Ticker
PYCWX
CUSIP
704329333
Fund Total Net Assets
As of 02/28/2026
$942.0 Million
Sales Charge
None
Benchmark
Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index
Intermediate-Term Bond – Appropriate as a core fixed-income holding for investors seeking exposure to a diversified bond portfolio.
The Payden Core Bond Fund invests in a diversified mix of bonds across a wide spectrum of sectors and maturities. It utilizes the entire range of maturities from cash instruments to 30-year bonds, investing in sectors, such as, sovereign bonds, corporates, mortgage-backed securities and asset-backed securities. There is some use of below investment-grade bonds for their added yield and diversification. The Fund has a moderate degree of expected price volatility given its longer-duration profile.
Bond selection is driven by extensive credit research.
Diversified portfolio holdings.
Investments allocated across the 1-year to 30-year maturity spectrum.
Data as of 02/28/2026
Data as of 02/28/2026
February was characterized by shifting interest rate expectations and renewed volatility across global fixed-income bond markets. In the U.S., the policy debate remained centered on whether inflation had slowed enough for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to resume rate cuts. In Europe, the macroeconomic narrative was clearer: inflation continued to moderate and growth data proved steadier than expected. As a result, the European Central Bank (ECB) kept rates unchanged, though financial markets still anticipate rate cuts over the medium term.
Fixed-income markets were driven by the tension between still-elevated inflation and evidence that economic activity is slowing. Consumer spending remained relatively strong, particularly in the services sectors, while manufacturing surveys continued to signal subdued conditions. The labor market showed further signs of cooling: layoffs remained low but hiring slowed and payroll growth moderated, consistent with a gradual rebalancing of labor demand. Inflation continued to ease overall, although progress varied across different categories, reinforcing the view that the return to the Fed's inflation target is unlikely to be smooth. Markets also paid attention to political developments, including discussion about the future leadership of the Fed ahead of the scheduled end of Chair Jerome Powell’s term in May 2026, which has kept investors focused on the longer-term direction policy. By the end of the month, The S&P 500 had fallen 0.87%, while the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury stood at 3.94%.
Our outlook remains cautiously optimistic, though risks are tilted to the downside. The U.S. economy remains central to our global outlook in 2026. We believe the current divergence between strong GDP growth and weakening labor markets in the U.S. is unusual and unlikely to persist. In our view, the economy faces a binary path: either reaccelerating as technology-driven productivity gains take hold or slipping into recession if labor market softness begins to weigh on economic activity. Regardless of the outcome, U.S. inflation is expected to continue moderating. This disinflationary trend, combined with labor-market weakness should allow the Fed to continue easing at least to neutral, and potentially beyond. Stickier inflation remains a risk to this central view. Outside the U.S., most developed economies appear relatively resilient, supported by moderate economic growth, declining inflation, and accommodating or easing monetary policy. Japan stands as an exception, where gradual policy tightening is expected to continue.
Moderating inflation and range-bound inflation expectations have historically been associated with a negative correlation between interest rates and risk assets. With economic growth facing more downside risks, we believe portfolios with a balanced and diversified allocation between duration and credit risk should be better positioned to navigate the uncertainty and the wide range of potential outcomes in 2026.
Despite the uncertain economic backdrop, credit valuations remain on the most expensive end of their historical ranges, even as corporate fundamentals appear relatively healthy. In this environment, we prefer to distribute risk in our portfolios in a more balanced manner across duration and credit. Consistent with our outlook, we maintain modest overweight positions in higher-quality credit sectors, including investment-grade corporate bonds and select high-quality securitized assets.
The minimum initial investment may be modified for certain financial intermediaries that submit trades on behalf of underlying investors. Payden Funds’ distributor may lower or waive the minimum initial investment for certain categories of investors at their discretion.
Ratings are measured on a scale that generally ranges from AAA (highest) to D (lowest) and are subject to change. Security ratings are assigned using the highest rating of Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch.
For more information and to obtain a prospectus or summary prospectus, click on the respective link below the Fund name at the top of this page, or call 800 572-9336. Before investing, investors should carefully read and consider investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses, and other important information about the Fund, which is contained in these documents. The Payden Funds are distributed through Payden & Rygel Distributors, member FINRA.
Interest Rate Risk: As with most funds that invest in debt securities, the income on and value of your shares in the Fund will fluctuate along with interest rates. When interest rates rise, the market prices of the debt securities the Fund owns usually decline. When interest rates fall, the prices of these securities usually increase.
Foreign Securities Risk: Investment in foreign securities entails certain risks from investing in domestic securities, including changes in exchange rates, political changes, differences in reporting standards, and, for emerging-market securities, higher volatility.
-0.29%
DividendsG
Dividend
$0.0254
Dividend Reinvest NAV
$9.42
Record Date
02/25/2026
Ex Date
02/26/2026
Payable Date
02/26/2026
Dividends Paid
Monthly
Capital GainsG
Short Term
None
Long Term
None
Reinvest NAV
None
Record Date
N/A
Ex Date
N/A
Payable Date
N/A
704329333
Fund Total Net Assets
As of 02/28/2026
$942.0 Million
Sales Charge
None
Benchmark
Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index
Intermediate-Term Bond – Appropriate as a core fixed-income holding for investors seeking exposure to a diversified bond portfolio.
The Payden Core Bond Fund invests in a diversified mix of bonds across a wide spectrum of sectors and maturities. It utilizes the entire range of maturities from cash instruments to 30-year bonds, investing in sectors, such as, sovereign bonds, corporates, mortgage-backed securities and asset-backed securities. There is some use of below investment-grade bonds for their added yield and diversification. The Fund has a moderate degree of expected price volatility given its longer-duration profile.
Bond selection is driven by extensive credit research.
Diversified portfolio holdings.
Investments allocated across the 1-year to 30-year maturity spectrum.
| YTD | 1 Year | 3 Years | 5 Years | 10 Years | Since Inception | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month-End (02/28/2026) | 1.86% | 6.47% | 5.64% | 0.67% | 2.28% | 2.86% |
| Quarter-End (12/31/2025) | 7.41% | 7.41% | 5.37% | -0.06% | 2.17% | 2.77% |
Investment MinimumH
Investor Class - Regular Account
$100,000
Adviser Class - Regular Account
$5,000
SI Class
$10,000,000
Investor Class - IRA Account
$100,000
Adviser Class - IRA Account
$2,000
Additional Investment - All Classes
$250
Duration
Percent of Portfolio
0-1 yr
15%
1-3 yrs
18%
3-5 yrs
26%
5-7 yrs
24%
7-10 yrs
12%
10+ yrs
5%
Credit
Percent of Portfolio
AAA
14%
AA
41%
A
11%
BBB
24%
BB
6%
B
2%
Unrated
2%
Sector
Percent of Portfolio
Corporates
36%
Mortgage-Backed
35%
Government/Gov't Related
19%
Asset-Backed
6%
Other
4%