Janus Henderson Multi-Sector Income Fund

JMUSX · NASDAQ

Market closed$8.63$-0.010000 (-0.12%)

Key statistics

Previous close$8.64
Open$8.63
Day high$8.63
Day low$8.63
52-week high$8.81
52-week low$8.57
Market cap7.27B
Volume
Average volume
P/E ratio
Forward P/E
EPS
Dividend yield0.00%

Market context

Why it moved

JMUSX edged slightly lower amid minimal trading activity and negligible volume, suggesting a routine, marginal price adjustment with no significant catalysts driving the move.

What is happening

Recent company-specific developments and publisher coverage.

July 17, 2026Janus Henderson Multi-Sector Income Fund is trading essentially flat amid a mixed backdrop for financial services. The broader financial sector ETF (XLF) is near 52-week highs, buoyed by a blockbuster Q2 earnings season across Wall Street—JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BNY, Morgan Stanley, and U.S. Bancorp all beat estimates on surging trading revenues, record investment banking fees, and strong asset management flows. For income-focused multi-sector bond funds like JMUSX, still-elevated interest rates continue to support net interest income dynamics, though a defensive tone in equities today—with Nasdaq futures off ~1.75%—reflects rotation pressures from chip weakness and global tech volatility.

-0.1156

July 15, 2026Janus Henderson Multi-Sector Income Fund edged up modestly, benefiting from a broadly constructive backdrop for fixed income and asset management as Wall Street banks posted blowout Q2 earnings. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and BofA all reported record or near-record results, with strong fixed income and investment banking revenue underscoring healthy credit markets — a positive signal for multi-sector income strategies. Meanwhile, a cooler-than-expected June CPI print (3.5% vs. 3.8% forecast) eased rate-hike fears, supporting bond prices and income-oriented funds, even as geopolitical tensions around the Strait of Hormuz keep the inflation outlook uncertain heading into H2.

0.348

July 14, 2026Janus Henderson Multi-Sector Income Fund edged slightly lower amid a mixed macro backdrop, as investors balanced strong Q2 bank earnings from JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America against renewed U.S.-Iran geopolitical tensions that lifted oil prices and added uncertainty. The financial sector ETF (XLF) is trading near 52-week highs, reflecting broad strength in financial services, though multi-sector income funds face a nuanced rate environment with elevated yields and cautious sentiment around private credit noted by Morningstar.

-0.2315

July 9, 2026Janus Henderson Multi-Sector Income Fund edged slightly lower amid a volatile macro backdrop shaped by renewed U.S.-Iran hostilities, which have driven oil prices sharply higher and reignited inflation concerns. With bond yields climbing and the Federal Reserve now expected to hold rates higher for longer — or potentially hike — the income fund faces headwinds as investors reassess fixed-income valuations, though its multi-sector approach may offer some insulation compared to pure rate-sensitive peers.

-0.2309

Peers