Greg Wilensky, CFA
Greg Wilensky is Head of US Fixed Income and a portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors, a position he has held since 2020. Prior to joining the firm, Greg served as senior vice president, director of the US multi-sector fixed income team and held several director and portfolio manager positions that spanned short duration, inflation-protected fixed income, securitised assets, and multi-asset strategies at AllianceBernstein from 1996 to 2019. Prior to that, he was a treasury manager – corporate finance at AT&T Corp. from 1993 to 1996.
Greg received his bachelor of science degree in business administration from Washington University, graduating magna cum laude. He also earned an MBA with high honours from the University of Chicago. Greg holds the Chartered Financial Analyst designation and has 31 years of financial industry experience.
Articles Written
Quick View: April U.S. CPI – positive news for the Fed
April’s CPI report keeps hopes for a summer rate cut alive, but are investors underestimating the rate trajectory through 2026?
Quick View: March U.S. CPI – Three times makes a trend
While stickier-than-expected inflation undoubtedly alters the timing of rate cuts, it likely does not affect the Fed’s goal of eventually easing restrictive policy.
The destructive power of portfolio volatility (and what investors can do about it)
Why portfolio volatility is a risk for investors and how to help mitigate this risk.
Does your balanced fund have these three essentials?
The three essential elements of an effective balanced strategy in the current environment.
Global Perspectives: Opportunities in equities, fixed income, and multi-asset investing
A discussion of current opportunities in equities and fixed income, and why we see a more attractive environment for multi-asset portfolios ahead.
Considerations for higher yields
Head of US Fixed Income Greg Wilensky explains why investors should consider how much interest rate risk they have in their portfolios, and make sure it is appropriate for their needs.