Guggenheim Investments

Guggenheim Investments is the global asset management and investment advisory division of Guggenheim Partners. We focus on the return and risk needs of insurance companies, corporate and public pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments and foundations, wealth managers, and high-net-worth investors.
Content From Guggenheim Investments
First Quarter 2023 Fixed-Income Sector Views

Valuations have reset after a volatile year.
Fed Day, Jobs Day, and 10 Macro Themes

Brian Smedley, Chief Economist and Head of the Macroeconomic and Investment Research Group, joins Macro Markets to discuss Fed policy, recent inflation, labor, and GDP data, and key takeaways for investors from our 10 Macroeconomic Themes for 2023.
10 Macroeconomic Themes for 2023

Guggenheim Investments’ Macroeconomic and Investment Research Group identifies 10 macroeconomic trends likely to shape monetary policy and investment performance this year.
Market Conditions Favor a Move Up in Credit Quality

Anne Walsh, Chief Investment Officer for Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, joined Bloomberg TV in Davos to discuss the outlook for credit as recession nears.
Minerd on the Fed and Investing Heading into 2023

Scott Minerd, Global CIO for Guggenheim Partners and Chairman of Guggenheim Investments, joins the year-end episode of Macro Markets on Fed Day for a wide-ranging discussion of the Federal Reserve’s execution of monetary policy, economic conditions, the investment landscape for risk assets, portfolio strategy, and more.
Fixed-Income Pain Giving Way to Opportunity

Anne Walsh, Chief Investment Officer for Fixed Income, on the economic and credit cycle, and on risk and opportunity across the fixed-income landscape.
Fixed-Income Sector Views

While the path to get us here has been painful, investable yields have the potential to meet the return objectives of pension plans, insurance companies, or other investors that may have been sitting on the sidelines—or taking undue risk within fixed income in a reach for yield.
The Jobs Data Trend is Duration’s Friend

October jobs data suggests a cooling labor market.
"I Would Not Call This a Pivot Today."

Scott Minerd, Guggenheim Partners Global CIO and Chairman of Guggenheim Investments, joins Bloomberg TV on Fed Day.
Weaker Payrolls Will Reward Pent-Up Demand for Fed Pivot

Weakening jobs picture will signal that Fed tightening is working as intended.
Macro Markets Podcast Episode 21: Measuring Sustainable Infrastructure

Jim Pass, head of project finance for Guggenheim Investments, and Kate Newman from the World Wildlife Fund talk about the most recent research collaboration between Guggenheim and WWF, a survey of infrastructure investors and developers.
Credit Yields Look Attractive Despite Rising Recession Risks

Signposts for credit investors as the next recession approaches.
The Inflation Moderation We Expected Should Continue

Lower July CPI inflation is likely the beginning of a trend.
"I Blame the Fed’s Forward Guidance for Market Instability"

Scott Minerd, Chairman of Guggenheim Investments and Guggenheim Partners Global CIO joins Bloomberg TV on Fed Day to discuss the Fed’s 75 basis point hike, and signs that the economy is already in recession.
Macro Markets Podcast Episode 18: Investment-Grade Corporates and the Macro Backdrop

Managing Director Justin Takata discusses the technical and fundamental drivers of value in investment grade corporates, and U.S. Economist Matt Bush addresses recession timing and the possible progression of policy.
Recession Signals Flashing Red

The latest data suggest that we may already be in a recession.
Macro Markets Podcast Episode 16: Fed Watch: A Deep Dive into 75

Brian Smedley, Guggenheim’s Chief Economist and Head of Macroeconomic and Investment Research, discusses the impact of the Fed’s 0.75% rate hike on markets and the economy.
Despite the Gray Mood, Skies Are Only Partly Cloudy

The outlook for credit amid rising inflation, monetary tightening, and war in Europe.
“A Season of Pain”

Scott Minerd, Guggenheim Partners Global CIO, joins CNBC to share his views on the consequences of aggressive Federal Reserve tightening.
Fed Aggressiveness Following Delayed Liftoff Sets Up 2023 Collision

The risks of tightening into a downturn.
Inflation, Fed Tightening, and War – Implications for the Economy and Markets
Get insight into the current macroeconomic environment and its implications for the markets in an insightful panel discussion featuring Maria Giraldo, Strategist and Matt Bush, Economist from Guggenheim Investments’ Macroeconomic and Investment Research Team. This informative session will explore how Guggenheim sees the inflation outlook, where Federal Reserve policy is heading, and how investors should be positioned in this environment. Thoughts on the crisis in Ukraine and outlook for a post pandemic environment will also be given.
Looking at Yields in High-Yield Credit

A properly diversified credit portfolio should have exposure to both high-yield corporate bonds and bank loans.
Delta Impact on Consumer Behavior Will Delay Tapering Announcement

The resurgent virus should keep a lid on Treasury Yields.
Latest CPI Validates the Transitory Nature of Inflation Spikes

Falling demand will help limit the extent of more price increases.
A Better Way to Pay for Infrastructure Investments

A revival of the Obama-era Build America Bonds would raise funds with less taxes.
The Fed's Strategic Play: Closing the Chapter on Its Credit Facilities

Examining the Fed’s announcement to sell its SMCCF holdings.
Inflation Is Spiking, But You Only Reopen the Economy Once

The spike in core CPI is a one-time adjustment as the economy reopens.
In the Recovery Phase of the Credit Cycle

Strong earnings growth, low default volumes, upward rating migration, and tighter spreads in the recovery phase of the credit cycle.
The Coming Disinflation

Supply chain disruptions may be a near-term challenge, but base effects will slow inflation next year.
Staying on Offense with Fixed Income
Get insight into the current macroeconomic environment and its implications for markets. This informative session will explore why Guggenheim believes the markets’ inflation concerns are overdone, how the Fed’s new framework virtually ensures several years of rates at zero, why investors should own duration and why a strong economy also bodes well for credit. Thoughts on the opening year of the Biden administration and the continuing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic will also be given.
Don’t Mistake Rapid Jobs Gains for a Strong Labor Market

Despite a strong March 2021 jobs report, full employment remains far away.
Don’t Look Now, But Bond Seasonality Is Turning Bullish

The summer months tend to deliver stronger-than-average returns for bonds.
A Successful Green New Deal Will Need Private Partners

A Green New Deal should not be viewed as a big government program, but as an opportunity to reinvent vast swaths of the U.S. economy while pursuing the laudable goal of carbon neutrality
The Fed’s Mixed Messaging on the Yield Curve

Fed Chair Jay Powell is giving conflicting guidance to bond investors.
Staying on Offense: Fixed-Income Outlook

Even as credit spreads have narrowed, further value remains.
A Drunk Man in the Snow: The Random Walk of Interest Rates

Investors’ reach for yield puts downward pressure on 10-year Treasury rates, likely rendering the current yield unsustainable.
High-Yield and Bank Loan Outlook - First Quarter 2021

Our positive 2021 economic outlook, combined with better-than-expected company fundamentals, supports strong credit performance and spreads.
In the Eye of the Storm

The relative calm we feel in the markets right now isn’t the end of the storm, it is just the eye.
China Matters More Than Ever

Among the many significant developments in the world that investors should be considering as part of their long-term thinking, one of the issues that concerns me the most is China.
A Payroll Tax Holiday Will Put the U.S. Back to Work

The pandemic creates a good opportunity to make Social Security more sustainable.
The Fed’s Roadmap
The Fed has increasingly unorthodox policy options if the economy remains mired in a protracted downturn.
Fireside Chat with Scott Minerd and Mike Milken
Scott Minerd, Chairman of Investments and Global CIO, and Mike Milken, Chairman of the Milken Institute, discuss at a Goal 17 Partners web event the government and private-sector response to COVID-19.
We Are All Government-Sponsored Enterprises Now
The support to corporate America during this economic shutdown risks the creation of a new moral obligation for the U.S. government.
Prepare for the Era of Recrimination
The unintended consequences and moral hazard of insufficient and misdirected policies.
The Emerging Emerging-Markets Crisis
Global capital markets are not pricing in the growing likelihood of rising EM corporate defaults.
Note to Clients: Where We Are Nibbling at Value
Allocating capital as the pandemic progresses; emerging markets may be next domino to fall.
The Faustian Bargain
The consequences of policymakers returning to the same tools employed in the financial crisis.
The Impact of ETFs and Index-Tracking and Passive Strategies on the Fixed-Income Market
There are three key areas where the allocation requirements of passive fixed-income vehicles have an impact on the market.
The Great Leverage Unwind
We entered into the current crisis with a whole financial system that had been incentivized by policymakers to take on excessive levels of debt and leverage. The turmoil we are seeing right now is the result of the unwinding of this leverage.
Value Is a Poor Timing Tool
Markets often overshoot, and just because things are cheap doesn’t mean they can’t get cheaper.
Necessary But Not Adequate
Without the right programs, this shortfall in credit availability will increase and it will further deepen the crisis.
The Butterfly Effect
If I had written a commentary on how 4,000 people dying from the flu would topple global financial markets, I think I would have been deemed insane. Yet today that is exactly the story.
Peace for Our Time
The cognitive dissonance in the credit market is stunning. I recently have had the feeling that I’m living peaceably in Britain during the 1930s while on the continent the Germans were building weapons, expanding their army and navy, and opportunistically grabbing land.
10 Macro Themes to Watch in 2020
Ten charts illustrate the macroeconomic trends most likely to shape Fed policy and investment performance in 2020 and beyond.
Global Central Banks Fueling a Ponzi Market
Ultimately, investors will awaken to the rising tide of defaults and downgrades.
The Risk Mitigation Advantage in Active Fixed-Income Management
Why active has the potential to outperform passive in fixed income.
Forecasting the Next Recession: Will Rate Cuts Be Enough?

History shows that once our recession forecast model reaches current levels, aggressive policy can delay recession, but not avoid it.
Forecasting the Next Recession: Will Rate Cuts Be Enough?
History shows that once our recession forecast model reaches current levels, aggressive policy can delay recession, but not avoid it.
Looking Past the Liquidity-Driven Rally
Credit spreads could get tighter in this liquidity-driven rally, but history has shown that the potential for widening from here is much greater.
Guggenheim’s Macro Outlook: Will the Fed’s Pivot Save the Day?
The Macro Outlook webcast featuring Brian Smedley, Head of Macroeconomic and Investment Research, will analyze a wide range of economic and market data that can help advisors navigate through a possible turning point in the business cycle. The following timely questions will be addressed: Will the Fed’s dovish pivot extend the expansion? Can we trust the recessionary signal of an inverted yield curve, or is it distorted by QE? When will the next recession begin, and how severe will it be for the economy and for markets? How should investors position in this environment?
This webinar will cover:
- Analyzing recent economic and market developments in a historical context
- What Guggenheim’s Recession Dashboard says about the timing of the next recession
- What Guggenheim’s proprietary asset allocation models say about how to invest in this environment
- Top themes for investors to watch
The Fed Should Hike Interest Rates, Not Cut Them
The Fed’s cure might make the disease worse without fixing the problem.
High-Yield Credit in a Fed Easing Cycle
High-yield corporate bond spreads and bank loan discount margins typically widen when the Fed is lowering interest rates.
U.S.-China Trade War: The New Long March
During the course of the last two years, we have consistently indicated that the course for the U.S. economy, along with risk assets and rates, was contingent on the impact of any unexpected exogenous events, most likely from overseas.
The Next Step for the Fed Could Be a Hike
Some believe we may have seen the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) last rate hike in this cycle, and that the next step from here will be a cut in rates as the economy loses momentum going into the first half of next year. I believe that view is plainly wrong.
Recession Outlook Summary
Recession fears resurfaced at the end of 2018 as a combination of negative data surprises, communication blunders by the Fed, slowing growth overseas, and rising trade tensions triggered a selloff in risk assets that led many in the market to fear a recession was imminent.
10 Macro Themes to Watch in 2019

Ten charts illustrate the macroeconomic trends most likely to shape Fed policy and investment performance in 2019 and beyond.
Amber Lights Flash at Davos
Should the mood this year at Davos prove once again to be a contra-indicator, this may be the signal that the economy is likely to re-accelerate soon and that the party in risk assets continues.
10 Macro Themes to Watch in 2019
Ten charts illustrate the macroeconomic trends most likely to shape Fed policy and investment performance in 2019 and beyond.
High-Yield and Bank Loan Outlook Report: Up the Escalator, Down the Elevator
An uptick in corporate defaults in 2019 will mark the beginning of a prolonged period of stress in the corporate bond market.
Sometimes Meteors Strike the Earth
What would be a normal seasonal correction is turning into the worst December selloff in equities since the Great Depression.
Fixed-Income Outlook: Jogging to the Exits

Guggenheim Investments’ recently published Fourth Quarter 2018 Fixed-Income Outlook reflects its investment management team’s view that the risk of a sudden widening in spreads next year is rising and could shock fixed-income investors who fail to position defensively now. “The key here is to manage this shift in a timely manner,” said Scott Minerd, Global CIO and Chairman of Investments. “Call it a jog to exit credit and liquidity risk.”
Fixed-Income Outlook: Jogging to the Exits
Preparing for the market turbulence that typically occurs in the run up to a recession.
Forecasting the Next Recession: The Yield Curve Doesn’t Lie
Our Recession Probability Model and Recession Dashboard continue to suggest a recession is likely to begin in early 2020. Investors ignore the yield curve’s signal at their peril.
High-Yield and Bank Loan Outlook
With the Federal Reserve (Fed) now targeting 2.00–2.25 percent on fed funds, tightening monetary policy is putting increasing pressure on corporate borrowers’ balance sheets across the leveraged credit landscape. We estimate that about 30–50 percent of the increase in short-term borrowing costs to date has passed through to the cost of debt for leveraged credit, depending on sector, and we expect this passthrough to increase over the next 12 months as the Fed raises rates.
Fixed-Income Outlook: Tail Risks Are Getting Fatter
While the U.S. economy remains on solid footing, exogenous risks threaten asset values, market confidence, and the strength of the U.S. economy.
Welcome, Immigrants. The U.S. Really Needs You

To achieve long-term prosperity, rational immigration policy must become a priority.
Late-Cycle Boost and Boom
Investors should stay guarded for exogenous shocks that could pull the next recession forward and cause markets to reprice credit risk.
No One Wins a Trade War
If you want to see who the real victims of tariffs are, go look in the mirror.
Forecasting the Next Recession: Updating Our Outlook for Recession Timing
New developments in fiscal policy, the labor market, and the neutral interest rate suggest that the expansion could extend into the latter half of our recession range.
High-Yield and Bank Loan Outlook
As the Federal Reserve (Fed) tightens monetary policy further, we expect to see default rates higher next year. Loan recovery rates averaged 70 percent between 1990 and 2017 as a result of their secured status and seniority in the capital structure. Senior secured bond recovery rates averaged 58 percent over the same period, while senior unsecured bond recovery rates averaged 43 percent. We are concerned about distressed exchanges as the risk of re-default is high. About 7 percent of high-yield corporate bond issuers have defaulted in the past.
Seeking a Return on Sustainable Development
The Western Pennsylvania of my youth was a magical place, with bucolic parklands and architectural gems like Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater. The decline of the steel industry over subsequent decades has left this beautiful countryside scarred with abandoned mills and rife with the toxins and refuse of a dying industry. This experience informs my perspective when I think about how to tackle the problem of funding the estimated $2.5 trillion gap in annual global infrastructure needs: How can future development avoid the mistakes of the past?
Forecasting the Next Recession
The business cycle is one of the most important drivers of investment performance. As the nearby chart shows, recessions lead to outsized moves across asset markets. It is therefore critical for investors to have a well-informed view on the business cycle so portfolio allocations can be adjusted accordingly.
Bull Market Complacency Calls for Caution—and Action
Investors need to be vigilant, as stocks and bonds are expensive, volatility is low, and risks lay ahead.
The Keys to American Growth
After years of relying on monetary policy to stabilize the U.S. economy, policymakers have redoubled their commitment to stronger pro-growth fiscal policies. As post-election Washington sets its sights on growth-oriented reforms, policymakers should remember that economic growth in any nation is determined by the four basic factors of production—land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
A Contrarian’s View on Inflation Fears
Longer-term bond yields are near their highs for this cycle, while the environment for riskier assets like high-yield bonds, bank loans and stocks remains positive.