Janus Henderson Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF (JMBS)

NYSEARCA: JMBS · Real-Time Price · USD
45.36
+0.03 (0.07%)
Jun 26, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT - Market closed
0.07%
Assets $6.80B
Expense Ratio 0.21%
PE Ratio n/a
Shares Out 150.95M
Dividend (ttm) $2.33
Dividend Yield 5.14%
Ex-Dividend Date May 29, 2026
Payout Ratio n/a
1-Year Return +1.02%
Volume 460,286
Open 45.27
Previous Close 45.33
Day's Range 45.26 - 45.41
52-Week Low 44.30
52-Week High 46.39
Beta 0.27
Holdings 629
Inception Date Sep 12, 2018

About JMBS

Fund Home Page

The Janus Henderson Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF (JMBS) is an exchange-traded fund that mostly invests in investment grade fixed income. The fund is an actively managed fund of mortgage-backed securities. The fund seeks a high level of total return. JMBS was launched on Sep 12, 2018 and is issued by Janus Henderson.

Asset Class Fixed Income
Category Government Mortgage-Backed Bond
Stock Exchange NYSEARCA
Ticker Symbol JMBS
ETF Provider Janus Henderson

Dividends

Ex-Dividend Amount Pay Date
May 29, 2026 $0.19211 Jun 4, 2026
Apr 30, 2026 $0.1898 May 6, 2026
Mar 31, 2026 $0.20045 Apr 7, 2026
Feb 27, 2026 $0.19053 Mar 5, 2026
Jan 30, 2026 $0.21024 Feb 5, 2026
Dec 22, 2025 $0.20292 Dec 29, 2025
Full Dividend History

News

Tokenization of ETFs 'potentially more impactful than AI' says Janus Henderson's Cherney

Janus Henderson's head of innovation Nick Cherney tells CNBC's Contessa Brewer the tokenization of ETFs is potentially the most transformative technology to hit financial services in decades and how t...

Other symbols: JAAAJABSJSIVNLA
10 months ago - CNBC Television

Fed on deck: Fixed income ETF strategies ahead of the meeting

Nick Cherney of Janus Henderson sits down with CNBC's Contessa Brewer on 'ETF Edge' to discuss the strategies investors can take to position their portfolios before the Fed decision this week and the ...

Other symbols: JAAAJABSJSIVNLA
10 months ago - CNBC Television

Homes are expensive right now, but these mortgage bonds look cheap

U.S. homes may be wildly unaffordable for first-time buyers, but mortgage bonds backed by those same properties could be dirt cheap.

2 years ago - Market Watch