Office address: 333 West Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60606
Website: nuveen.com
Year established: 1898
Company type: financial services
Employees: 3,900+
Expertise: fixed income, equities, real estate, real assets, private capital, municipal bonds, ETFs, closed-end funds, mutual funds, 529 plans, responsible investing, infrastructure, farmland
Parent company: TIAA (Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America)
Key people: William Huffman (CEO), Loran Shanahan (COO), Seun Salami (CFO), Saira Malik (chief investment officer), Kevin McCarthy (general counsel), Tara Giuliano (CMO), Josh Shamansky (CHRO)
Financing status: corporate-backed or acquired
Nuveen operates as TIAA's asset management arm from its headquarters in Chicago. The company ranks among the top 20 largest global asset managers by total worldwide assets. It has over 3,900 professionals working across 27 countries to deliver investment solutions.
John Nuveen founded his company in Chicago in 1898 with a clear purpose: fund public infrastructure projects. His first bond financed a water system in Bemidji, and the business grew quickly from there.
By 1915, the firm underwrote schools, lighting systems, and sewer projects across 24 states. Nuveen became the largest municipal bond specialist in the US by 1940, funding utility districts and hydroelectric dams.
The company underwrote construction for the Eisenhower Interstate Highway System in 1957, funding roads that connected cities nationwide. It was restructured as an investment banking firm in 1983 to grow its asset management arm. Four years later, it brought the largest IPO in NYSE history to market: a $1.6 billion closed-end fund.
The 2000s brought major changes as Nuveen added capabilities in equities, real assets, and commodities. TIAA acquired the firm in 2014, and the deal created one of the industry's largest investment organizations. The company now operates across dozens of countries around the globe.
Beyond its global reach, the firm also produces research that shapes how the industry approaches retirement planning. One example is its 2024 survey with the TIAA Institute, which showed that about 90 percent of 401(k) participants see value in adding fixed annuities to their plans. This kind of insight helps the company continue the mission John Nuveen started more than 125 years ago.
Nuveen offers a range of investment products built for individual and institutional clients:
For real estate exposure, the Nuveen Short-Term REIT ETF (NURE) tracks holdings in apartments, hotels, and self-storage facilities. It is considered one of the top REIT ETFs because of its focus on short-term lease properties.
Nuveen says its culture drives business and inspires career growth. The firm was among the first in the industry to practice responsible investing. It states a commitment to its people, clients, and communities.
The company highlights several aspects of its workplace:
As a subsidiary of TIAA, the firm also provides benefits for flexibility, security, and work-life balance. Nuveen's employee benefits include the following:
Nuveen also offers summer internships and rotational programs alongside TIAA for early career talent. The firm states it supports staff at every career stage through learning and development initiatives. These efforts focus on building skills and leadership readiness.
William Huffman is Nuveen's CEO and chairs the executive committee, while also serving on TIAA's executive committee. He joined the company in 2008 after almost two decades at Northern Trust, where he led its Global Advisors unit. Huffman earned degrees from Indiana University and the University of Chicago.
Huffman leads a team of executives who guide the firm's strategy and operations:
This leadership team sets the direction for Nuveen's global operations. Together, they oversee the firm's investment, marketing, legal, and administrative functions.
In 2025, the company sought to develop strategies that combine target-date funds with annuities to help retirees spend more confidently. Along with BlackRock, Nuveen is exploring TDF-annuity blends to address retiree underspending. The strategy positions the firm to help clients overcome the fear of running out of money in retirement.
The firm is also growing its alternatives business to meet rising advisor demand. Jeff Carlin, its head of global wealth advisory services, spoke with InvestmentNews about the company's acquisition of Brooklyn Investment Management, a direct indexing firm. The deal has already brought in over $2 billion in assets, with an $11 billion pipeline in sight. This momentum signals Nuveen's push to expand its footprint in wealth advisory services.
One big deal is on the books — and another is in the process of being finalized — a sign that merger and acquisition activity continues to accelerate in the money management industry.
One big deal is in the books — and another is in the process of being finalized — a sign that merger and acquisition activity continues accelerate in the money management industry.
If there is one word to describe Donald Robert Pitti, the financial planning pioneer who died Dec. 18 at the age of 80, it would be “enthusiasm.”
Many of your retired clients are discovering that their accumulated savings are insufficient to meet their current expenses, which translates into a need for more retirement income.
The focus for most advisers over the next three months will be on executing client reviews and completing the follow-ups. This is the most important service an adviser can perform for clients in today's market, so don't clutter your team's calendars with other activities. When done right, client reviews are an effective business builder.
The following is the text of an email that Bruce Bond, chairman and CEO of Invesco Powershares, sent earlier this week describing his new role:
Many of your retired clients are discovering their accumulated savings are insufficient to meet their current expenses, which translates into a need for more income. In a survey by the Longevity Alliance Inc. of Washington, 42% of retirees said changes in their financial situation would cause them to think about going back to work and 29% said changes in health care coverage would be a key factor in that decision.
Over the past year, we have heard from advisers that the economy has not only hit clients hard; it has also affected their children who have recently graduated from college.
At a recent workshop, advisers told me they are finding that a surprisingly high percentage of their clients are unemployed. Advisers found this out during client reviews, and they said the news surprised them — clients had never called to let them know about their new circumstances.
A 77-year-old retired securities attorney and his wife are taking Nuveen Investments Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., Citigroup and others to court over $2 million in losses they claim to have suffered from investing in auction rate securities.
Rydex Investments, now Rydex SGI, is repositioning itself to focus on an expanded set of asset management capabilities.
To communicate with both ends of the client spectrum, top advisers employ technology to make processes predictable, sustainable and repeatable
Raymond James wants help from issuers of auction rate securities. And if it doesn’t get it, the firm may sue.
Private-equity investors appear to be leading the pack of likely buyers for the three broker-dealers in the AIG Advisor Group, which houses 6,571 representatives, according to a number of industry sources.
Nuveen Investments Inc. will acquire Winslow Capital Management Inc., an investment manager that specializes in managing large-cap-growth-stock portfolios for institutions and high-net-worth investors.