Greg Wilensky, CFA

Greg Wilensky is Head of US Fixed Income and Portfolio Manager at Janus Henderson Investors, a position he has held since 2020. He is responsible for co-managing the Core Plus and Short Duration strategies as well as the fixed income portion of the Balanced strategy, all since 2020. Additionally, he co-manages the Sustainable & Impact Core Bond ETF. 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 30 years of financial industry experience.
Articles Written

Bank failures in 2023: Fallen rogues or canaries in the coalmine?
Considering the risks recent bank failures pose to markets and how investors might position their portfolios accordingly.

Inflation and fixed income: Where to from here?
A likely path for U.S. core inflation and finding value within fixed income.
Global Perspectives: Silver lining for equities and bonds in a cloudy market
A turbulent year for both stocks and bonds may hold some silver linings.

Fixed income returns in 2022: Have our bonds betrayed us?
Following a recent drawdown, can U.S. fixed income still fulfil its role in a diversified portfolio?

Beyond the noise: just another rollercoaster
Sticking with sectors that now look entrenched in a post-pandemic world can help investors navigate the new storm of rising rates, inflation and geopolitical uncertainty.

Market and economy are giving Fed what it wants
Greg Wilensky and Jason England explain that even with an update to its interest rate projections that is perhaps overdue, the Fed can afford to be patient.