JPMorgan Government Bond Fund Class R3 OGGPX

Medalist Rating as of | See JPMorgan Investment Hub
  • NAV / 1-Day Return 9.60  /  −0.41 %
  • Total Assets 1.9B
  • Adj. Expense Ratio
    0.800%
  • Expense Ratio 0.800%
  • Distribution Fee Level Low
  • Share Class Type Retirement, Medium
  • Category Intermediate Government
  • Credit Quality / Interest Rate Sensitivity High/Moderate
  • Min. Initial Investment 0
  • Status Open
  • TTM Yield 3.03%
  • Effective Duration 5.85 years

USD | NAV as of Jun 18, 2026 | 1-Day Return as of Jun 18, 2026, 12:11 AM GMT+0

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Morningstar’s Analysis OGGPX

Medalist rating as of .

A manager transition doesn't dent this fund's appeal.

Our research team assigns Bronze ratings to strategies they’re confident will outperform their Morningstar Category average over a market cycle on a risk-adjusted basis.

A manager transition doesn't dent this fund's appeal.

Principal Paul Olmsted

Paul Olmsted

Principal

Summary

Longtime lead manager Michael Sais plans to retire in April 2026 but will remain on the fund until then. That plus J.P. Morgan's depth of talent and a thoughtful transition plan here keeps the fund's appeal intact.

Sais, the lead manager on the fund since 1997, announced his April 2026 retirement a year in advance, providing time to facilitate a smooth transition to Ed Fitzpatrick, whom the firm named as a comanager on the fund on April 1, 2025. The choice is interesting given Fitzpatrick's macro focus compared with Sais' deep expertise within securitized sectors; Fitzpatrick comes with solid credentials, though, as J.P. Morgan's US rates head; he joined the firm in 2013 and has more than 25 years in the industry. However, his management experience at the firm is limited. For Fitzpatrick, getting up to speed will be paramount. He will have the help of Sais and comanager Bob Manning, who's been on the fund since 2013 and has more than 25 years of industry experience.

These team changes should not affect the fund's disciplined security selection process and stable approach to keeping the portfolio's interest rate sensitivity, as measured by duration, within a narrow range. The fund prominently features agency-backed residential mortgage-backed securities and commercial mortgage-backed securities, typically about two-thirds of assets, compared with the Bloomberg US Government Bond Index, which only features Treasuries and agency debt. The fund's MBS stakes are not run-of-the-mill; instead, these securities are prone to losing less in rising interest rate environments and gaining more in falling ones than plain-vanilla pass-throughs, which are included in some competitors' portfolios. This style results in a more predictable portfolio and stable duration profile, limiting extension, or increased sensitivity to changing yields, in periods of rising yields, for example. While the process considers macro themes, bottom-up security selection drives portfolio construction. Agency-backed RMBS and CMBS and collateralized-mortgage obligations typically constitute 45% to 65% of assets, while Treasuries (15%-30%) and agencies (3%-20%) take a supporting role. The fund's approach to interest rate risk stands out, too, normally keeping duration between 5.0 and 5.5 years.

While all bonds in the portfolio carry a US government guarantee, the team’s constant relative value assessments produce subtle portfolio shifts over time. The June 2025 portfolio held Treasuries and agencies (33% of assets), agency CMBS (16.4%), agency CMOs (25.6%), residential pass-throughs (22.1%), and cash. This approach enables the fund to outyield its 100% Treasury and agency debt index. Recently, these relative value calls led to a reduction in Treasuries and agencies while upping residential MBS pass-throughs and CMOs to nearly 48% of assets, about 9 percentage points higher than two years prior. The fund's 5.8-year duration was little changed over the past year, which is slightly longer than its upper band.

Long-term performance is competitive. Since January 1997, Sais' first full month on the fund, the R6 shares’ 4.07% annualized return through August 2025 beat its distinct intermediate government peer median and the Bloomberg US Government Index by 45 and 26 basis points, respectively. This top-quintile result and its lower-than-peer volatility led to strong risk-adjusted results. The fund's typical longer-duration profile can cause it to lag when long-term yields rise; otherwise, though, its more stable MBS investments make for a compelling ride.

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Principal Paul Olmsted

Paul Olmsted

Principal

Process

Above Average

Diligent, bottom-up security analysis drives J.P. Morgan's time-tested mortgage-centric approach. This, along with various macro inputs and disciplined duration positioning, merits an Above Average Process rating.

Superior prepayment protection and more predictable results take center stage. The managers look for bonds prone to lose less in rising interest-rate environments and gain more in falling ones (better convexity profiles) than plain-vanilla pass-through mortgage-backed securities, or those that have more stable cash flows and durations given changes to underlying yields. For instance, the team favors specified MBS pools with distinct underlying characteristics, CMO structures that target specific cash flows, and CMBS that limit prepayment risk. By contrast, most intermediate government-bond peers may favor plain-vanilla agency pass-throughs or TBA MBS forward contracts, which can cause meaningful duration changes.

The fund's emphasis on agency MBS distinguishes it from its Bloomberg US Government Bond Index, which features only Treasuries and agency debt. While the process begins with J.P. Morgan's quarterly investment meeting, which establishes macro themes for the subsequent three to six months, bottom-up security selection drives portfolio construction. Agency-backed RMBS and CMBS and CMOs typically constitute 45% to 65% of assets, while Treasuries (15%-30%) and agency debt (3%-20%) play supporting roles.

This strategy's unique approach to duration management differs from that of rivals. The fund doesn’t follow the index. Instead, it aims to keep duration, a measure of interest rate sensitivity, within a narrow 5.0- to 5.5-year band, typically shorter than the index but longer than its typical peer. This approach enhances predictability but limits the team's ability to add value as yield environments change.

While all bonds in the portfolio carry a US government guarantee, the team's constant relative value assessments lead to subtle portfolio shifts over time. The June 2025 portfolio featured a mix of Treasuries and agencies (33% of assets), agency CMBS (16.4%), agency CMOs (25.6%), residential pass-throughs (22.1%), and cash. This approach allows the fund to outyield its pure Treasury and agency debt benchmark.

Portfolio adjustments over the trailing 24 months included fewer Treasuries and more RMBS. For example, better relative value in MBS led to an increase in agency CMOs and pass-throughs to 47.7%, almost 9 percentage points more than two years prior. The managers funded these positions from Treasuries, which fell to 33% of assets, from about 40% in mid-2023. The strategy's 2.9% cash stake is typical, normally staying between 2% and 6%.

Stable duration is a hallmark. The June 2024 portfolio's 5.9-year duration was slightly longer than its normal band. Otherwise, duration has remained range-bound, owing to better portfolio convexity versus other mortgage-focused rivals. Meanwhile, its typical peer's duration has been more variable. For example, in 2022, the average peer's 4.7-year duration at the beginning of the year lengthened to about 6.0 years by the end of the year as yields rose and prepayments slowed. While the managers have allowed duration to drift slightly above its 5.5-year upper band more recently, they intend to keep it shorter than 6.0 years.

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Principal Paul Olmsted

Paul Olmsted

Principal

People

High

Longtime lead manager Michael Sais plans to retire in April 2026 but will remain on the fund until then. That, plus J.P. Morgan's depth of talent and a thoughtful transition plan here, keeps the fund's People rating at High.

Sais, the lead manager on the fund since 1997, announced his April 2026 retirement a year in advance, providing time to facilitate a smooth transition to Ed Fitzpatrick, whom the firm named as a comanager on the fund on April 1, 2025. The choice is interesting given Fitzpatrick's macro focus compared to Sais' deep expertise within securitized sectors; Fitzpatrick comes with solid credentials, though, as J.P. Morgan's US rates head. He joined the firm in 2013 and has more than 26 years in the industry. However, his management experience at the firm is limited. For Fitzpatrick, getting up to speed will be paramount. He will have the help of Sais and comanager Bob Manning, who's been on the fund since 2013. Manning's contributions to the firm's fixed-income efforts span more than 25 years. He is also a comanager with Sais on JPMorgan Limited Duration Bond ETF.

Alongside this trio, a large network of fixed-income specialists helps to guide macro positioning and contributes to bottom-up ideas and security selection. While the managers conduct much of their bottom-up research and trading, they also draw on specialized portfolio managers and a growing team of securitized analysts, which may play a larger role under the Fitzpatrick regime. A nine-person securitized research cohort, led by Sameer Ruiz since 2024, is responsible for security analysis and monitoring, and collaborates with the managers on investment ideas. This tight-knit team jointly makes portfolio decisions. This team has also been stable, with no turnover of other key contributors over the past five years. They added another securitized analyst in mid-2025.

The managers' personal stakes in the fund are mixed. Sais' exceeds $1 million, Manning has between $100,001 and $500,000, and Fitzpatrick has none.

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Associate Director Alyssa Stankiewicz

Alyssa Stankiewicz

Associate Director

Parent

High

J.P. Morgan continues to build a track record of strong stewardship, supporting a Parent rating upgrade to High from Above Average.

With more than USD 4 trillion in assets under management (including USD 1.3 trillion in money market funds) and a broad reach, J.P. Morgan is among the largest active asset managers in the US, Europe, and Asia. Although some multi-asset offerings have struggled over the past five years, prompting new leadership to make changes to investment teams, its equity and fixed-income teams boast long-tenured portfolio managers who practice repeatable investment processes that have generally produced strong long-term results. Most of its funds are core building blocks with long lifetimes, though its lineup around the world also includes more-specialized options: Two options-based equity-income exchange-traded funds, launched in 2020 and 2022, are now among the firm’s largest. J.P. Morgan has been an early mover in offering active ETFs, having converted 12 of its open-end mutual funds to the structure and launching others. It isn’t always at the forefront of emerging trends. While it has filed registration statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission for an interval fund and an ETF investing in private markets, it hasn’t yet introduced such an option for all investors, whether on its own or in partnership with another asset manager, unlike some of its closest competitors.

To support the firm’s diverse investment offerings, J.P. Morgan has invested heavily in both portfolio management tools and its client organization. Over the past 10 years, the firm has developed robust proprietary technology with advanced analytics and broad buy-in from investment analysts, portfolio traders, and portfolio managers, all of whom have easy access to the platform. The firm also stands apart for its demonstrated commitment to clients. In the early 2000s, J.P. Morgan began pivoting its engagement with financial advisors to adopt a more consultative approach, supported by its sought-after Guide to the Markets research series that focuses on investor education, not product pitches. This perspective can help clients stay the course, supporting positive investor outcomes.

Incentives reinforce alignment with fundholders. Beginning more than 10 years ago, investment team compensation is tied to three-, five-, and 10-year performance, and portfolio managers must invest at least half of their deferred compensation in J.P. Morgan strategies. Many firms encourage portfolio managers to invest alongside fundholders, but J.P. Morgan goes a step further in requiring client-facing individuals to invest substantial portions of their incentive compensation in the funds.

Although some funds still face high cost hurdles, more than half of share classes charge competitive fees relative to peers.

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Principal Paul Olmsted

Paul Olmsted

Principal

Performance

The fund's disciplined approach has led to solid and predictable long-term performance. Strong security selection and a preference for agency mortgage-backed securities provide a yield advantage versus its 100% Treasury and agency debt benchmark, although this yield edge has waned recently compared with the intermediate government Morningstar Category norm.

Since lead manager Michael Sais' first full month on the fund in January 1997, the R6 share class' 4.07% annualized return through August 2025 beat its unique peer median's 3.62% and the Bloomberg US Government Index's 3.81%. This result was the third best out of 28 funds with track records as long. The fund's Sharpe ratio, a measure of excess return relative to excess standard deviation, was better than four-fifths of category rivals.

With a tight duration band of roughly 5.0 to 5.5 years, which normally subjects the fund to more interest rate sensitivity than most peers, investors may experience a bumpier ride here. The fund may lag over the short term when yields rise, like in 2022, when its 11.7% loss was slightly more severe than the peer median 11.5% drop. However, the strategy has generated better results versus rivals when long-term yields fall, like in 2019, when the fund's 6.6% gain outpaced its median peer's 6.2%.

Over the past 12 months through August 2025, the fund's 3.14% return was better than the benchmark's 2.44% but slightly worse than its typical rival's; tighter spreads in more stable MBS structures have eroded the fund's yield edge.

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Principal Paul Olmsted

Paul Olmsted

Principal

Price

−1.43

JPMorgan Government Bond R3's Prospectus Adjusted Expense Ratio is 0.8% per year. It places it in the second-most-expensive quintile of the Morningstar US Fund Intermediate Government Category, where the median fee is 0.45% per year. This cost positioning translates into a Medalist Rating Price Score of -1.43, which reflects its relative price positioning within the category. The Price Score ranges from -2.50 (most expensive) to +2.50 (cheapest), with higher scores indicating better cost competitiveness.

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Portfolio Holdings OGGPX

  • Current Portfolio Date
  • Equity Holdings
  • Bond Holdings
  • Other Holdings
  • % Assets in Top 10 Holdings 20.7
Top 10 Holdings
% Portfolio Weight
Market Value USD
Sector

United States Treasury Bonds 3.75%

3.44 65M
Government

Federal National Mortgage Association 5.5%

3.31 62M
Securitized

United States Treasury Bonds 4.875%

2.38 45M
Government

JPMorgan US Government MMkt Instl

2.37 44M
Cash and Equivalents

United States Treasury Notes 2.25%

2.08 39M
Government

U.S. Treasury Security Stripped Interest Security

2.06 39M
Government

United States Treasury Notes 2.25%

1.84 35M
Government

United States Treasury Notes 3.875%

1.61 30M
Government

United States Treasury Notes 3.5%

1.57 29M
Government

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. 2.898%

1.50 28M
Securitized

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