UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
FORM N-CSR
 
CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES
 
Investment Company Act file number           811-22584
 
Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)
 
2455 Corporate West Drive, Lisle, IL 60532
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)
 
Amy J. Lee
2455 Corporate West Drive, Lisle, IL 60532
(Name and address of agent for service)
 
Registrant's telephone number, including area code:               (630) 505-3700
 
Date of fiscal year end:   December 31
 
Date of reporting period:   January 31, 2013 – June 30, 2013
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Item 1.  Reports to Stockholders.
 
The registrant's semi-annual report transmitted to shareholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Investment Company Act”), is as follows:  
 
 
 

 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
WWW.GUGGENHEIMINVESTMENTS.COM/GEQ
 
. . .YOUR LINK TO THE LATEST, MOST UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION ABOUT GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND
 
The shareholder report you are reading right now is just the beginning of the story. Online at www. guggenheiminvestments.com/geq , you will find:
 
     
Daily, weekly and monthly data on share prices, net asset values, distributions and more
   
     
Portfolio overviews and performance analyses
   
     
Announcements, press releases and special notices
   
     
Fund and adviser contact information
 
Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC and Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC are continually updating and expanding shareholder information services on the Fund’s website in an ongoing effort to provide you with the most current information about how your Fund’s assets are managed and the results of our efforts. It is just one more small way we are working to keep you better informed about your investment in the Fund.
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
June 30, 2013

 
 
DEAR SHAREHOLDER
 
We thank you for your investment in the Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund (the “Fund”). This report covers the Fund’s performance for the semiannual period ended June 30, 2013.
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide a high level of risk-adjusted total return with an emphasis on current income.
 
All Fund returns cited—whether based on net asset value (“NAV”) or market price—assume the reinvestment of all distributions. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund provided a total return on an NAV basis of 8.22% and a total return based on market price of 7.46%. The closing price of the Fund’s shares as of June 30, 2013, was $18.19, which represented a discount of 7.90% to the NAV of $19.75. The closing price of the Fund’s shares as of December 31, 2012, was $17.73, which represented a discount of 7.03% to the NAV of $19.07. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The market price of the Fund’s shares fluctuates from time to time, and at any given time it may be higher or lower than the Fund’s NAV. NAV performance data reflects fees and expenses of the Fund.
 
The Fund paid distributions of $0.4375 in January and April of 2013. The most recent distribution represents an annualized distribution rate of 9.62% based on the Fund’s last closing market price of $18.19 on June 30, 2013.
 
Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC (“GFIA” or the “Adviser”) serves as the investment adviser to the Fund. Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC serves as the Fund’s Options Strategy Sub-Adviser, responsible for the management of the Fund’s options strategy. Security Investors, LLC serves as the Equity Strategy Sub-Adviser, responsible for managing the underlying equity portfolio. Each of the Adviser and the two Sub-Advisers is an affiliate of Guggenheim Partners, LLC (“Guggenheim”), a global diversified financial services firm.
 
The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective primarily through a two-part strategy. Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests substantially all of its managed assets in a portfolio of common stocks included in the S&P 500 Equal Weight™ Index in equal weight. In addition, the Fund utilizes a call option writing strategy to seek to generate current income and potentially mitigate overall portfolio volatility.
 
In connection with the implementation of its strategy, the Fund currently uses leverage through a credit facility provided by a large multi-national financial institution. As of June 30, 2013, the amount of leverage was approximately 17% of the Fund’s total assets (including the proceeds of leverage). Although the use of financial leverage by the Fund may create an opportunity for increased return for the common shares, it also results in additional risks and can magnify the effect of any losses. There can be no assurance that a leveraging strategy will be successful during any period during which it is employed.
 
We encourage shareholders to consider the opportunity to reinvest their distributions from the Fund through the Dividend Reinvestment Plan (“DRIP”), which is described in detail on page 27 of this report. When shares trade at a discount to NAV, the DRIP takes advantage of the discount by reinvesting the quarterly dividend distribution in common shares of the Fund purchased in the market at a price less than NAV. Conversely, when the market price of the Fund’s common shares is at a premium above NAV, the DRIP reinvests participants’ dividends in newly-issued common shares at the greater of NAV per share or 95% of the market price per share. The DRIP provides a cost effective means to accumulate additional shares and enjoy the potential benefits of compounding returns over time.
 
To learn more about the Fund’s performance and investment strategy for the period ended June 30, 2013, we encourage you to read the Questions & Answers section of the report, which begins on page 4.
 
We appreciate your investment and look forward to serving your investment needs in the future. For the most up-to-date information on your investment, please visit the Fund’s website at guggenheiminvestments.com/geq.
 
Sincerely,
 
Donald C. Cacciapaglia
Chief Executive Officer
Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund
 
 
July 31, 2013
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 3
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
  June 30, 2013
 
Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund (the “Fund”) is managed by a team of seasoned investment professionals. Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC (the “Adviser”) is responsible for overall management of the Fund. Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC (“GPIM”) is the Fund’s investment sub-adviser responsible for the management of the Fund’s options strategy (“Options Strategy Sub-Adviser”). The options strategy is managed by a team that includes Farhan Sharaff, Assistant Chief Investment Officer; Jayson Flowers, Senior Managing Director; and Jamal Pesaran, CFA, Portfolio Manager. Security Investors, LLC (“Security Investors”) is the sub-adviser responsible for managing the underlying equity portfolio (“Equity Strategy Sub-Adviser”). The team at Security Investors includes Ryan Harder, CFA, Portfolio Manager, and James R. King, CFA, Portfolio Manager.
 
The Adviser, the Options Strategy Sub-Adviser and the Equity Strategy Sub-Adviser are all affiliates of Guggenheim Partners, LLC (“Guggenheim”), a global diversified financial services firm. In the following interview, the investment team discusses the market environment and the Fund’s performance for the six-month period ended June 30, 2013.
 
Please describe the Fund’s investment objective and strategy.
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide a high level of risk-adjusted total return with an emphasis on current income. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective primarily through a two-part strategy. Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests substantially all of its managed assets in a portfolio of common stocks included in the S&P 500 Equal Weight™ Index (the “Index”) in equal weight. In addition, the Fund utilizes a call option writing strategy to seek to generate current income and potentially mitigate overall portfolio volatility.
 
The Index has the same constituents as the S&P 500 ® Index (“S&P 500”), a capitalization-weighted index comprised of 500 common stocks, chosen by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC on a statistical basis, but each company in the Index is assigned an equal weight rather than a weight based on its relative market capitalization. The Fund’s equity portfolio is rebalanced quarterly so that each stock in the Fund’s portfolio has the same target weighting. While the Fund generally expects to invest in substantially all of the stocks included in the Index, the Fund may also seek to obtain exposure through investments in other investment funds, other securities and/or financial instruments that are intended to correlate with or replicate the characteristics of exposure to stocks included in the Index or the Index generally.
 
The Fund utilizes a call option writing strategy to seek to generate current income and potentially mitigate overall portfolio volatility. The Fund’s options strategy follows the Options Strategy Sub-Adviser’s proprietary dynamic rules-based methodology, GPIM’s “Portable Volatility Monetization Strategy” SM . The Options Strategy Sub-Adviser expects to implement the Fund’s options strategy by selling (i.e., writing) call options on securities indices, exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) that track securities indices, baskets of securities and other instruments, which will include securities that are not held by the Fund. As this strategy involves uncovered option writing, it may result in less volatility mitigation than, and may be subject to more risks compared to, option strategies involving writing options on securities held by the Fund. There can be no assurance that the Fund’s use of call options will be successful.
 
The Fund currently employs leverage through a credit facility provided by a large multi-national financial institution. As of June 30, 2013, the amount of leverage was approximately 17% of the Fund’s total assets. Although financial leverage may create an opportunity for increased return for shareholders, it also results in additional risks and can magnify the effect of any losses. There is no assurance that the strategy will be successful. If income and gains earned on securities purchased with the financial leverage proceeds are greater than the cost of the financial leverage, common shareholders’ return will be greater than if financial leverage had not been used. Conversely, if the income or gains from the securities purchased with the proceeds of financial leverage are less than the cost of the financial leverage, common shareholders’ return will be less than if financial leverage had not been used.
 
Please provide an overview of the economic and market environment during the six months ended June 30, 2013.
 
Monetary accommodation from the world’s central banks and continued improvement in the U.S. housing and labor markets benefited the overall U.S. economy for the six months ended June 30, 2013. However, speculation about the end of quantitative easing in May and June, along with growing fundamental risk in Japan and China, led to a selloff in fixed income and equity markets. For most of the period, equity markets were strong and abundant liquidity and steady quantitative easing had produced a benign credit environment with low default rates.
 
Housing was the primary locomotive of U.S. economic growth in the period. Housing-related activity, including private residential investment, personal expenditures on household durable goods and utilities, as well as the wealth effect on consumption from home price appreciation, has contributed positively to GDP since 1Q2011. However, housing’s contribution remains dependent on the maintenance of extremely low mortgage rates, which have recently begun moving higher.
 
Overshadowing solid job gains in the period was slow improvement in the unemployment rate. The participation rate has been relatively flat over the past six months, and in general, has been declining. A bright spot has been the private sector, where the U.S. economy is currently adding jobs at a rate that is over 20% higher than that of the prior expansion.
 
4 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
QUESTIONS& ANSWERS continued
  June 30, 2013
 
A number of global central banks implemented interest rate cuts during the period, owing to sluggish global economic growth and continuing weakness in commodity prices. The world is still in a deflationary environment, which has given policymakers a great deal of leeway to extend and expand accommodative monetary policies aimed at stimulating output.
 
The rise in volatility late in the period was in large part a result of shifting market sentiment, but, fundamentally, economic growth in the U.S. has not changed materially. With ongoing weakness in growth and inflation, global central banks are expected to maintain accommodative policies for the foreseeable future.
 
For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the return of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (the “S&P 500”) was 13.82%, and in mid-May reached an all-time high. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Market Volatility Index (the “VIX”) was down by 6.44% for the period. The VIX is a key measure of market expectations of near-term volatility conveyed by the S&P 500 stock index option prices. Remaining at multi-year lows, it touched its low of the period in March before spiking to a period high in June, when markets became unsettled.
 
How did the Fund perform for the six-month period ended June 30, 2013?
 
All Fund returns cited—whether based on net asset value (“NAV”) or market price—assume the reinvestment of all distributions. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund provided a total return on an NAV basis of 8.22% and a total return based on market price of 7.46%. The closing price of the Fund’s shares as of June 30, 2013, was $18.19, which represented a discount of 7.90% to the NAV of $19.75. The closing price of the Fund’s shares as of December 31, 2012, was $17.73, which represented a discount of 7.03% to the NAV of $19.07. The widening discount of the Fund over the period may be a reflection of lack of analyst coverage of the strategy. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The market price of the Fund’s shares fluctuates from time to time, and it may be higher or lower than the Fund’s NAV. NAV performance data reflects fees and expenses of the Fund.
 
The Fund paid distributions of $0.4375 in January and April of 2013. The most recent dividend represents an annualized distribution rate of 9.62% based on the Fund’s last closing market price of $18.19 on June 30, 2013. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
 
In comparison, the return of the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index was 16.20% and the return of the capitalization-weighted S&P 500 Index was 13.82% for the six months ended June 30, 2013. The outperformance of the Equal Weight Index versus the S&P 500 generally reflects the weaker performance of the largest stocks in the S&P 500 during the period.
 
What was the nature of the January and April 2013 distributions?
 
When the January and April 2013 distributions were paid, the majority of the distributions were characterized as return of capital. A final determination of the tax character of distributions paid by the Fund in 2013 will be reported to shareholders in January 2014 on Form 1099-DIV.
 
The Fund utilizes a strategy that writes calls against a dynamically levered long underlying exposure. As markets have been pushing higher over the past few quarters, the Fund has seen gains in the underlying holdings, which have not been realized, and at the same time realized some short-term capital losses in the call options, which results from paying more to repurchase call options that were previously sold. But on a total return basis, the Fund has sufficient unrealized gains via appreciation of underlying holdings to more than offset any losses on the call options and cover the distribution. It is expected that a portion of these gains in the underlying holdings could be realized over time.
 
What drove performance for the equal-weighted Index versus its capitalization-weighted version?
 
Because an equal-weighted index holds the same dollar amount of each member security, it will tend to underweight larger stocks and overweight smaller stocks when compared to a capitalization-weighted index with the same members. As a result, equal-weighted indices tend to outperform during periods when the very largest stocks underperform mid- and small-caps. This period was no exception.
 
The largest single contributor to the outperformance of the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index was Apple, Inc. During the first half of 2013, Apple’s stock suffered a loss of just over 25% and, as a result, was knocked from the top spot in the capitalization-weighted S&P 500. During those six months, the maker of iPhones and iPads had a substantial weighting of well over 3% of the capitalization-weighted S&P 500 Index and dragged down performance by nearly a full percent. Meanwhile, the Equal Weight S&P 500 Index held Apple in a much smaller weighting, and was largely unaffected by the steep drop in price.
 
Among sectors, consumer discretionary stocks were the best performers in the Equal Weight S&P 500 Index, and also contributed the most to outperformance versus the capitalization-weighted version. While the performance advantage was well distributed throughout the sector, a few stocks stood out. Best Buy, with a gain of 133%, and Netflix, up 127%, led the sector and the broader index for the six-month period. While neither gets much weight in the cap-weighted S&P 500, the equal-weighted version overweights them substantially, allowing the pair to contribute nearly 20 basis points each to performance.
 
On the other end of the spectrum, some of the biggest detractors from relative performance were the large pharmaceutical stocks. Compared to the cap-weighted S&P 500, the Equal Weight S&P 500 Index was
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 5
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
QUESTIONS& ANSWERS continued
  June 30, 2013
 
substantially underweighted in health care giants Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Merck. Underweighted positions in these three largest health care companies collectively hurt the Equal Weight S&P 500's relative performance by over half a percent.
 
What role did the option strategy play in performance for the period?
 
The Fund writes call options on indices rather than individual stocks. Moreover, the option portfolio does not have to equal the full portfolio, but can be adjusted depending on GPIM’s view of market conditions.
 
Under normal market conditions, the Fund seeks overall portfolio volatility that, after taking into account the Fund’s option writing strategy and use of leverage, approximates that of the broad equity market. During the period, the options portfolio helped reduce the risk of the Fund, as measured by standard deviation of returns.
 
Markets with gradual drifts higher and low levels of implied volatility, as experienced during the most recent quarter, create the biggest challenges for the strategy. The strategy typically benefits from choppy, range-bound markets where uncertainty is present, causing call option premiums to rise.
 
How did the Fund’s leverage affect performance during this period?
 
The strong performance of the underlying index contributed to outperformance for the strategy for the period, with leverage also benefitting the strategy. To lower the risk of the strategy and the risk of leverage, GPIM aims to reduce leverage in strong up markets (accompanied by low implied volatility) or when the market is near its highs of the period, and may add leverage when the market is at period lows or selling off. The extreme underlying moves experienced over the quarter challenged the strategy, and GPIM’s management of the leverage, as described, protected the portfolio and lowered the risk of the strategy.
 
Index Definitions
 
Indices are unmanaged and reflect no expenses. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
 
The Chicago Board Options Exchange Market Volatility Index is a key measure of market expectations of near-term volatility conveyed by the S&P 500 stock index option prices.
 
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is a capitalization-weighted index of 500 stocks. The index is designed to measure performance of the broad domestic economy through changes in the aggregate market value of 500 stocks representing all major industries.
 
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Equal Weight Index has the same constituents as the S&P 500, but each company is assigned a fixed equal weight.
 
Risks and Other Considerations
 
The views expressed in this report reflect those of the portfolio managers only through the report period as stated on the cover. These views are subject to change at any time, based on market and other conditions and should not be construed as a recommendation of any kind. The material may also include forward looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty, and there is no guarantee that any predictions will come to pass.
 
There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objectives. The value of the Fund will fluctuate with the value of the underlying securities. Historically, closed-end funds often trade at a discount to their net asset value. Risk is inherent in all investing, including the loss of your entire principal. Therefore, before investing you should consider the risks carefully.
 
Please see guggenheiminvestments.com/geq for a detailed discussion about Fund risks and considerations.
 
6 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
FUND SUMMARY (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 
 
     
Fund Statistics  
   
Share Price  
 
$18.19  
Common Share Net Asset Value  
 
$19.75  
Premium/(Discount) to NAV  
 
-7.90%  
Net Assets ($000)  
 
$173,215  
 
Total Returns  
   
(Inception 10/27/11)  
Market  
NAV  
Six Months  
7.46%  
8.22%  
One Year  
7.09%  
12.21%  
Since Inception - average annual  
2.56%  
10.47%  
 
 
Performance data quoted represents past performance, which is no guarantee of future results and current performance may be lower or higher than the figures shown. The NAV total returns reflect the Fund's total annual expenses. For the most recent month-end performance figures, please visit www.guggenheiminvestments.com/geq. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate with changes in the market conditions and other factors so that an investor's shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost.
 
 
 
   
Sector Breakdown*  
% of Common Stocks  
Consumer, Non-cyclical  
19.9%  
Financial  
16.1%  
Consumer, Cyclical  
13.5%  
Industrial  
12.8%  
Technology  
9.8%  
Energy  
8.7%  
Communications  
8.1%  
Utilities  
6.1%  
Basic Materials  
4.8%  
Diversified  
0.2%  
* Securities are classified by sectors that represent broad groupings of industries .
 
P ortfolio composition and sector breakdown are subject to change daily. For more information, please visit www.guggenheiminvestments.com/geq. The above summaries are provided for informational purposes only and should not be viewed as recommendations. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
 
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 7
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 
 
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Common Stocks – 121.3%  
 
   
Basic Materials – 5.9%  
 
4,400  
 
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.(a)  
$     402,908  
4,419  
 
Airgas, Inc.(a)  
421,838  
52,202  
 
Alcoa, Inc.(a)  
408,220  
15,329  
 
Allegheny Technologies, Inc.(a)  
403,306  
2,297  
 
CF Industries Holdings, Inc.(a)  
393,936  
23,894  
 
Cliffs Natural Resources, Inc.(a)  
388,278  
12,464  
 
Dow Chemical Co.(a)  
400,967  
5,968  
 
Eastman Chemical Co.(a)  
417,820  
5,044  
 
Ecolab, Inc.(a)  
429,698  
8,047  
 
EI du Pont de Nemours & Co.(a)  
422,468  
6,773  
 
FMC Corp.(a)  
413,559  
14,335  
 
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc.(a)  
395,789  
5,402  
 
International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.(a)  
406,014  
9,346  
 
International Paper Co.(a)  
414,122  
6,286  
 
LyondellBasell Industries NV (Netherlands)(a)  
416,510  
11,866  
 
MeadWestvaco Corp.(a)  
404,749  
4,012  
 
Monsanto Co.(a)  
396,386  
7,327  
 
Mosaic Co.(a)  
394,266  
12,771  
 
Newmont Mining Corp.(a)  
382,491  
9,482  
 
Nucor Corp.(a)  
410,760  
2,755  
 
PPG Industries, Inc.(a)  
403,360  
3,594  
 
Praxair, Inc.(a)  
413,885  
2,314  
 
Sherwin-Williams Co.(a)  
408,652  
5,203  
 
Sigma-Aldrich Corp.(a)  
418,113  
23,692  
 
United States Steel Corp.(a)  
415,320  
     
10,183,415  
   
Communications – 9.8%  
 
1,547  
 
Amazon.com, Inc.(a) (b)  
429,587  
11,803  
 
AT&T, Inc.(a)  
417,826  
28,874  
 
Cablevision Systems Corp., Class A(a)  
485,661  
8,882  
 
CBS Corp., Class B(a)  
434,063  
11,760  
 
CenturyLink, Inc.(a)  
415,716  
17,595  
 
Cisco Systems, Inc.(a)  
427,734  
10,667  
 
Comcast Corp., Class A(a)  
446,734  
28,410  
 
Corning, Inc.(a)  
404,274  
6,025  
 
Crown Castle International Corp.(a) (b)  
436,150  
6,837  
 
Directtv(a) (b)  
421,296  
5,548  
 
Discovery Communications, Inc., Class A(a) (b)  
428,361  
8,263  
 
eBay, Inc.(a) (b)  
427,362  
7,308  
 
Expedia, Inc.(a)  
439,577  
5,729  
 
F5 Networks, Inc.(a) (b)  
394,155  
100,443  
 
Frontier Communications Corp.(a)  
406,794  
16,961  
 
Gannett Co., Inc.(a)  
414,866  
485  
 
Google, Inc., Class A(a) (b)  
426,979  
8,507  
 
Harris Corp.(a)  
418,970  
29,213  
 
Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.(a)  
 425,049  
29,913  
 
JDS Uniphase Corp.(a) (b)  
430,149  
22,251  
 
Juniper Networks, Inc.(a) (b)  
429,667  
7,445  
 
Motorola Solutions, Inc.(a)  
429,800  
1,982  
 
NetFlix, Inc.(a) (b)  
418,380  
19,831  
 
News Corp. Class A, Class A(a) (b)  
303,414  
6,754  
 
Omnicom Group, Inc.(a)  
424,624  
519  
 
priceline.com, Inc.(a) (b)  
429,281  
6,369  
 
Scripps Networks Interactive, Inc., Class A(a)  
425,194  
57,905  
 
Sprint Nextel Corp.(a) (b)  
406,493  
18,958  
 
Symantec Corp.(a)  
425,986  
4,078  
 
Time Warner Cable, Inc.(a)  
458,693  
7,375  
 
Time Warner, Inc.(a)  
426,423  
6,648  
 
TripAdvisor, Inc.(a) (b)  
404,664  
1,825  
 
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc.  
52,907  
13,547  
 
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc., Class A  
441,632  
9,412  
 
VeriSign, Inc.(a) (b)  
420,340  
8,299  
 
Verizon Communications, Inc.(a)  
417,772  
6,347  
 
Viacom, Inc., Class B(a)  
431,913  
6,644  
 
Walt Disney Co.(a)  
419,569  
875  
 
Washington Post Co., Class B(a)  
423,299  
51,007  
 
Windstream Corp.(a)  
393,264  
16,128  
 
Yahoo!, Inc.(a) (b)  
404,974  
     
16,919,592  
   
Consumer, Cyclical – 16.4%  
 
8,694  
 
Abercrombie & Fitch Co., Class A(a)  
393,404  
9,618  
 
AutoNation, Inc.(a) (b)  
417,325  
1,000  
 
AutoZone, Inc.(a) (b)  
423,690  
5,964  
 
Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.(a) (b)  
422,848  
15,774  
 
Best Buy Co., Inc.(a)  
431,103  
5,014  
 
BorgWarner, Inc.(a) (b)  
431,956  
9,132  
 
CarMax, Inc.(a) (b)  
421,533  
12,525  
 
Carnival Corp. (Panama)(a)  
429,482  
1,151  
 
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc.(a) (b)  
419,367  
9,302  
 
Cintas Corp.(a)  
423,613  
7,244  
 
Coach, Inc.(a)  
413,560  
3,819  
 
Costco Wholesale Corp.(a)  
422,267  
7,180  
 
CVS Caremark Corp.(a)  
410,552  
8,068  
 
Darden Restaurants, Inc.(a)  
407,273  
8,276  
 
Delphi Automotive PLC (Jersey)(a)  
419,510  
8,282  
 
Dollar General Corp.(a) (b)  
417,661  
8,630  
 
Dollar Tree, Inc.(a) (b)  
438,749  
17,743  
 
DR Horton, Inc.(a)  
377,571  
6,704  
 
Family Dollar Stores, Inc.(a)  
417,726  
8,889  
 
Fastenal Co.(a)  
407,561  
27,577  
 
Ford Motor Co.(a)  
426,616  
4,059  
 
Fossil Group, Inc.(a) (b)  
419,335  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
8 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Consumer, Cyclical (continued)  
 
10,866  
 
GameStop Corp., Class A(a)  
$       456,699  
10,220  
 
Gap, Inc.(a)  
426,481  
12,362  
 
General Motors Co.(a) (b)  
411,778  
5,390  
 
Genuine Parts Co.(a)  
420,797  
27,685  
 
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.(a) (b)  
423,304  
7,977  
 
Harley-Davidson, Inc.(a)  
437,299  
8,208  
 
Harman International Industries, Inc.(a)  
444,874  
9,613  
 
Hasbro, Inc.(a)  
430,951  
5,534  
 
Home Depot, Inc.(a)  
428,719  
24,572  
 
International Game Technology(a)  
410,598  
24,387  
 
JC Penney Co., Inc.(a) (b)  
416,530  
11,281  
 
Johnson Controls, Inc.(a)  
403,747  
8,128  
 
Kohl's Corp.(a)  
410,545  
10,860  
 
Lennar Corp., Class A(a)  
391,395  
8,346  
 
Limited Brands, Inc.(a)  
411,041  
10,298  
 
Lowe's Cos., Inc.(a)  
421,188  
8,742  
 
Macy's, Inc.(a)  
419,616  
10,398  
 
Marriott International, Inc., Class A(a)  
419,767  
9,480  
 
Mattel, Inc.(a)  
429,539  
4,307  
 
McDonald's Corp.(a)  
426,393  
15,601  
 
Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.(a)  
409,526  
6,850  
 
NIKE, Inc., Class B(a)  
436,208  
7,191  
 
Nordstrom, Inc.(a)  
431,029  
3,800  
 
O'Reilly Automotive, Inc.(a) (b)  
427,956  
7,965  
 
PACCAR, Inc.(a)  
427,402  
6,123  
 
PetSmart, Inc.(a)  
410,180  
20,320  
 
Pulte Group, Inc.(a) (b)  
385,470  
3,438  
 
PVH Corp.(a)  
429,922  
2,448  
 
Ralph Lauren Corp.(a)  
425,316  
6,536  
 
Ross Stores, Inc.(a)  
423,598  
30,561  
 
Southwest Airlines Co.(a)  
393,931  
26,426  
 
Staples, Inc.(a)  
419,116  
6,462  
 
Starbucks Corp.(a)  
423,196  
6,388  
 
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.(a)  
403,658  
6,140  
 
Target Corp.(a)  
422,800  
5,616  
 
Tiffany & Co.(a)  
409,069  
8,407  
 
TJX Cos., Inc.(a)  
420,854  
10,368  
 
Urban Outfitters, Inc.(a) (b)  
417,001  
2,266  
 
VF Corp.(a)  
437,474  
8,448  
 
Walgreen Co.(a)  
373,402  
5,661  
 
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.(a)  
421,688  
3,281  
 
Whirlpool Corp.(a)  
375,215  
1,666  
 
WW Grainger, Inc.(a)  
420,132  
7,210  
 
Wyndham Worldwide Corp.(a)  
412,628  
3,137  
 
Wynn Resorts Ltd.(a)  
401,536  
5,962  
 
Yum! Brands, Inc.(a)  
413,405  
     
28,405,675  
   
Consumer, Non-cyclical – 24.2%  
 
11,514  
 
Abbott Laboratories(a)  
            401,608  
9,810  
 
Abbvie, Inc.(a)  
405,545  
3,353  
 
Actavis, Inc.(a) (b)  
423,216  
10,756  
 
Adt Corp.(a)  
428,627  
7,003  
 
Aetna, Inc.(a)  
444,944  
4,597  
 
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) (b)  
424,027  
4,190  
 
Allergan, Inc.(a)  
352,966  
11,913  
 
Altria Group, Inc.(a)  
416,836  
7,717  
 
AmerisourceBergen Corp.(a)  
430,840  
4,351  
 
Amgen, Inc.(a)  
429,270  
12,814  
 
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.(a)  
434,523  
6,233  
 
Automatic Data Processing, Inc.(a)  
429,204  
9,849  
 
Avery Dennison Corp.(a)  
421,144  
18,542  
 
Avon Products, Inc.(a)  
389,938  
6,004  
 
Baxter International, Inc.(a)  
415,897  
6,485  
 
Beam, Inc.(a)  
409,268  
4,298  
 
Becton Dickinson and Co.(a)  
424,771  
1,999  
 
Biogen IDEC, Inc.(a) (b)  
430,186  
44,570  
 
Boston Scientific Corp.(a) (b)  
413,164  
9,058  
 
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.(a)  
404,802  
6,061  
 
Brown-Forman Corp., Class B(a)  
409,421  
9,463  
 
Campbell Soup Co.(a)  
423,848  
8,861  
 
Cardinal Health, Inc.(a)  
418,239  
11,214  
 
CareFusion Corp.(a) (b)  
413,236  
3,552  
 
Celgene Corp.(a) (b)  
415,264  
6,218  
 
Cigna Corp.(a)  
450,744  
4,964  
 
Clorox Co.(a)  
412,707  
10,508  
 
Coca-Cola Co.(a)  
421,476  
11,729  
 
Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.(a)  
412,392  
7,206  
 
Colgate-Palmolive Co.(a)  
412,832  
12,434  
 
ConAgra Foods, Inc.(a)  
434,320  
8,149  
 
Constellation Brands, Inc., Class A(a) (b)  
424,726  
6,430  
 
Covidien PLC (Ireland)(a)  
367,796  
627  
 
Covidien PLC (Ireland)(b) (c)  
35,864  
3,817  
 
CR Bard, Inc.(a)  
414,832  
3,289  
 
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc.(a) (b)  
397,311  
10,336  
 
DENTSPLY International, Inc.(a)  
423,363  
9,033  
 
Dr Pepper Snapple Group, Inc.(a)  
414,886  
6,055  
 
Edwards Lifesciences Corp.(a) (b)  
406,896  
8,143  
 
Eli Lilly & Co.(a)  
399,984  
6,971  
 
Equifax, Inc.(a)  
410,801  
6,197  
 
Estee Lauder Cos., Inc., Class A(a)  
407,577  
6,843  
 
Express Scripts Holding Co.(a) (b)  
422,145  
10,319  
 
Forest Laboratories, Inc.(a) (b)  
423,079  
8,600  
 
General Mills, Inc.(a)  
417,358  
8,115  
 
Gilead Sciences, Inc.(a) (b)  
415,569  
14,806  
 
H&R Block, Inc.(a)  
410,867  
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 9
 
 
 

 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Consumer, Non-cyclical (continued)  
 
4,754  
 
Hershey Co.(a)  
$       424,437  
10,563  
 
Hormel Foods Corp.(a)  
407,521  
11,697  
 
Hospira, Inc.(a) (b)  
448,111  
5,237  
 
Humana, Inc.(a)  
441,898  
850  
 
Intuitive Surgical, Inc.(a) (b)  
430,593  
14,651  
 
Iron Mountain, Inc.(a)  
389,863  
4,116  
 
JM Smucker Co.(a)  
424,565  
4,991  
 
Johnson & Johnson(a)  
428,527  
6,598  
 
Kellogg Co.(a)  
423,790  
4,332  
 
Kimberly-Clark Corp.(a)  
420,810  
7,613  
 
Kraft Foods Group, Inc.(a)  
425,338  
12,184  
 
Kroger Co.(a)  
420,835  
4,239  
 
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings(a) (b)  
424,324  
5,716  
 
Life Technologies Corp.(a) (b)  
423,041  
9,658  
 
Lorillard, Inc.(a)  
421,861  
742  
 
MasterCard, Inc., Class A(a)  
426,279  
5,866  
 
McCormick & Co., Inc.(a)  
412,732  
7,744  
 
McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.(a)  
411,903  
3,709  
 
McKesson Corp.(a)  
424,681  
5,211  
 
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co.(a)  
412,868  
8,009  
 
Medtronic, Inc.(a)  
412,223  
8,840  
 
Merck & Co., Inc.(a)  
410,618  
8,547  
 
Molson Coors Brewing Co., Class B(a)  
409,059  
14,219  
 
Mondelez International, Inc.(a)  
405,668  
7,153  
 
Monster Beverage Corp.(a) (b)  
434,687  
6,814  
 
Moody's Corp.(a)  
415,177  
13,379  
 
Mylan, Inc.(a) (b)  
415,150  
10,936  
 
Patterson Cos., Inc.(a)  
411,194  
11,413  
 
Paychex, Inc.(a)  
416,803  
5,161  
 
PepsiCo, Inc.(a)  
422,118  
3,573  
 
Perrigo Co.(a)  
432,332  
14,571  
 
Pfizer, Inc.(a)  
408,134  
4,601  
 
Philip Morris International, Inc.(a)  
398,539  
5,432  
 
Procter & Gamble Co.(a)  
418,209  
16,135  
 
Quanta Services, Inc.(a) (b)  
426,932  
6,769  
 
Quest Diagnostics, Inc.(a)  
410,404  
1,789  
 
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) (b)  
402,310  
8,755  
 
Reynolds American, Inc.(a)  
423,479  
12,619  
 
Robert Half International, Inc.(a)  
419,329  
17,400  
 
Safeway, Inc.(a)  
411,684  
31,076  
 
SAIC, Inc.(a)  
432,889  
9,408  
 
St Jude Medical, Inc.(a)  
429,287  
6,307  
 
Stryker Corp.(a)  
407,937  
12,296  
 
Sysco Corp.(a)  
420,031  
9,081  
 
Tenet Healthcare Corp.(a) (b)  
418,634  
18,067  
 
Total System Services, Inc.(a)  
442,280  
16,584  
 
Tyson Foods, Inc., Class A(a)  
 425,877  
6,644  
 
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.(a)  
435,049  
6,155  
 
Varian Medical Systems, Inc.(a) (b)  
415,155  
5,423  
 
WellPoint, Inc.(a)  
443,818  
24,905  
 
Western Union Co.(a)  
426,125  
8,251  
 
Whole Foods Market, Inc.(a)  
424,761  
5,445  
 
Zimmer Holdings, Inc.(a)  
408,048  
13,663  
 
Zoetis, Inc.(a)  
422,050  
     
41,848,276  
   
Diversified – 0.2%  
 
15,270  
 
Leucadia National Corp.(a)  
400,379  
   
Energy – 10.6%  
 
4,923  
 
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.(a)  
423,033  
4,993  
 
Apache Corp.(a)  
418,563  
9,209  
 
Baker Hughes, Inc.(a)  
424,811  
6,095  
 
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., Class A(a)  
432,867  
6,826  
 
Cameron International Corp.(a) (b)  
417,478  
20,496  
 
Chesapeake Energy Corp.(a)  
417,708  
3,524  
 
Chevron Corp.(a)  
417,030  
6,945  
 
ConocoPhillips(a)  
420,173  
13,267  
 
Consol Energy, Inc.(a)  
359,536  
23,786  
 
Denbury Resources, Inc.(a) (b)  
411,974  
7,803  
 
Devon Energy Corp.(a)  
404,820  
6,311  
 
Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.(a)  
434,134  
7,299  
 
Ensco PLC, Class A (United Kingdom)(a)  
424,218  
3,217  
 
EOG Resources, Inc.(a)  
423,615  
5,320  
 
EQT Corp.(a)  
422,248  
4,680  
 
Exxon Mobil Corp.(a)  
422,838  
7,621  
 
FMC Technologies, Inc.(a) (b)  
424,337  
9,874  
 
Halliburton Co.(a)  
411,943  
6,968  
 
Helmerich & Payne, Inc.(a)  
435,152  
6,426  
 
Hess Corp.(a)  
427,265  
11,033  
 
Kinder Morgan, Inc.(a)  
420,909  
12,328  
 
Marathon Oil Corp.(a)  
426,302  
5,324  
 
Marathon Petroleum Corp.(a)  
378,323  
6,723  
 
Murphy Oil Corp.(a)  
409,363  
26,659  
 
Nabors Industries Ltd. (Bermuda)(a)  
408,149  
6,091  
 
National Oilwell Varco, Inc.(a)  
419,670  
18,839  
 
Newfield Exploration Co.(a) (b)  
450,065  
11,288  
 
Noble Corp. (Switzerland)(a)  
424,203  
7,320  
 
Noble Energy, Inc.(a)  
439,493  
4,614  
 
Occidental Petroleum Corp.(a)  
411,707  
9,560  
 
Oneok, Inc.(a)  
394,924  
25,261  
 
Peabody Energy Corp.(a)  
369,821  
6,642  
 
Phillips 66(a)  
391,280  
2,891  
 
Pioneer Natural Resources Co.(a)  
418,472  
14,482  
 
QEP Resources, Inc.(a)  
402,310  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
10 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Energy (continued)  
 
5,777  
 
Range Resources Corp.(a)  
$       446,678  
12,676  
 
Rowan Companies PLC (United Kingdom)(a) (b)  
431,871  
5,919  
 
Schlumberger Ltd. (Curacao)(a)  
424,156  
11,599  
 
Southwestern Energy Co.(a) (b)  
423,711  
12,343  
 
Spectra Energy Corp.(a)  
425,339  
7,416  
 
Tesoro Corp.(a)  
388,005  
11,152  
 
Valero Energy Corp.(a)  
387,755  
12,725  
 
Williams Cos., Inc.(a)  
413,181  
22,308  
 
WPX Energy, Inc.(a) (b)  
422,514  
     
18,301,944  
   
Financial – 19.5%  
 
4,788  
 
ACE Ltd. (Switzerland)(a)  
428,430  
7,371  
 
Aflac, Inc.(a)  
428,403  
9,043  
 
Allstate Corp.(a)  
435,149  
5,809  
 
American Express Co.(a)  
434,281  
9,340  
 
American International Group, Inc.(a) (b)  
417,498  
5,481  
 
American Tower Corp., REIT(a)  
401,045  
5,178  
 
Ameriprise Financial, Inc.(a)  
418,797  
6,532  
 
AON PLC (United Kingdom)(a)  
420,334  
14,651  
 
Apartment Investment & Management Co., Class A, REIT(a)  
440,115  
8,384  
 
Assurant, Inc.(a)  
426,829  
3,149  
 
AvalonBay Communities, Inc., REIT(a)  
424,832  
32,430  
 
Bank of America Corp.(a)  
417,050  
14,551  
 
Bank of New York Mellon Corp.(a)  
408,156  
12,930  
 
BB&T Corp.(a)  
438,068  
3,713  
 
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., Class B(a) (b)  
415,559  
1,570  
 
BlackRock, Inc.(a)  
403,255  
3,851  
 
Boston Properties, Inc., REIT(a)  
406,165  
6,947  
 
Capital One Financial Corp.(a)  
436,341  
18,697  
 
CBRE Group, Inc., Class A(a) (b)  
436,762  
21,505  
 
Charles Schwab Corp.(a)  
456,550  
4,911  
 
Chubb Corp.(a)  
415,716  
9,179  
 
Cincinnati Financial Corp.(a)  
421,316  
8,611  
 
Citigroup, Inc.(a)  
413,070  
5,705  
 
CME Group, Inc.(a)  
433,466  
11,349  
 
Comerica, Inc.(a)  
452,031  
8,954  
 
Discover Financial Services(a)  
426,569  
37,053  
 
E*Trade Financial Corp.(a) (b)  
469,090  
7,524  
 
Equity Residential, REIT(a)  
436,842  
23,150  
 
Fifth Third Bancorp(a)  
417,858  
2,880  
 
Franklin Resources, Inc.(a)  
391,738  
38,534  
 
Genworth Financial, Inc., Class A(a) (b)  
439,673  
2,603  
 
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.(a)  
393,704  
14,515  
 
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.(a)  
448,805  
9,226  
 
HCP, Inc., REIT(a)  
419,229  
6,292  
 
Health Care REIT, Inc., REIT(a)  
 421,753  
24,614  
 
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc., REIT(a)  
415,238  
51,129  
 
Hudson City Bancorp, Inc.(a)  
468,341  
56,290  
 
Huntington Bancshares, Inc.(a)  
443,565  
2,448  
 
IntercontinentalExchange, Inc.(a) (b)  
435,155  
12,646  
 
Invesco Ltd. (Bermuda)(a)  
402,143  
7,977  
 
JPMorgan Chase & Co.(a)  
421,106  
40,717  
 
KeyCorp(a)  
449,516  
19,259  
 
Kimco Realty Corp., REIT(a)  
412,720  
12,994  
 
Legg Mason, Inc.(a)  
402,944  
12,275  
 
Lincoln National Corp.(a)  
447,669  
9,507  
 
Loews Corp.(a)  
422,111  
4,135  
 
M&T Bank Corp.(a)  
462,085  
6,809  
 
Macerich Co., REIT(a)  
415,145  
10,609  
 
Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.(a)  
423,511  
9,641  
 
MetLife, Inc.(a)  
441,172  
16,410  
 
Morgan Stanley(a)  
400,896  
13,002  
 
NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc.(a)  
426,336  
7,420  
 
Northern Trust Corp.(a)  
429,618  
10,472  
 
NYSE Euronext(a)  
433,541  
30,805  
 
People's United Financial, Inc.(a)  
458,995  
8,965  
 
Plum Creek Timber Co., Inc., REIT(a)  
418,397  
5,970  
 
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.(a)  
435,332  
11,144  
 
Principal Financial Group, Inc.(a)  
417,343  
17,160  
 
Progressive Corp.(a)  
436,207  
11,016  
 
ProLogis, Inc., REIT(a)  
415,524  
6,015  
 
Prudential Financial, Inc.(a)  
439,275  
2,793  
 
Public Storage, REIT(a)  
428,251  
47,202  
 
Regions Financial Corp.(a)  
449,835  
2,552  
 
Simon Property Group, Inc., REIT(a)  
403,012  
18,445  
 
SLM Corp.(a)  
421,653  
6,417  
 
State Street Corp.(a)  
418,453  
13,634  
 
SunTrust Banks, Inc.(a)  
430,425  
5,775  
 
T Rowe Price Group, Inc.(a)  
422,441  
6,555  
 
Torchmark Corp.(a)  
426,993  
5,161  
 
Travelers Cos., Inc.(a)  
412,467  
15,270  
 
Unum Group(a)  
448,481  
12,108  
 
US Bancorp(a)  
437,704  
6,019  
 
Ventas, Inc., REIT(a)  
418,080  
2,342  
 
Visa, Inc., Class A(a)  
428,001  
5,116  
 
Vornado Realty Trust, REIT(a)  
423,861  
10,554  
 
Wells Fargo & Co.(a)  
435,564  
14,984  
 
Weyerhaeuser Co., REIT(a)  
426,894  
13,647  
 
XL Group PLC (Ireland)(a)  
413,777  
15,721  
 
Zions Bancorporation(a)  
454,022  
     
33,768,278  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 11
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Industrial – 15.5%  
 
3,817  
 
3M Co.(a)  
$     417,389  
9,632  
 
Agilent Technologies, Inc.(a)  
411,864  
5,563  
 
Amphenol Corp., Class A(a)  
433,580  
9,781  
 
Ball Corp.(a)  
406,303  
10,749  
 
Bemis Co., Inc.(a)  
420,716  
4,162  
 
Boeing Co.(a)  
426,355  
5,055  
 
Caterpillar, Inc.(a)  
416,987  
7,503  
 
CH Robinson Worldwide, Inc.(a)  
422,494  
16,995  
 
CSX Corp.(a)  
394,114  
3,650  
 
Cummins, Inc.(a)  
395,879  
6,780  
 
Danaher Corp.(a)  
429,174  
4,993  
 
Deere & Co.(a)  
405,681  
5,394  
 
Dover Corp.(a)  
418,898  
6,564  
 
Eaton Corp. PLC (Ireland)(a)  
431,977  
7,551  
 
Emerson Electric Co.(a)  
411,832  
11,074  
 
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc.(a)  
420,923  
4,277  
 
FedEx Corp.(a)  
421,627  
17,343  
 
FLIR Systems, Inc.(a)  
467,742  
7,522  
 
Flowserve Corp.(a)  
406,263  
6,949  
 
Fluor Corp.(a)  
412,145  
12,570  
 
Garmin Ltd. (Switzerland)(a)  
454,532  
5,434  
 
General Dynamics Corp.(a)  
425,645  
18,021  
 
General Electric Co.(a)  
417,907  
5,421  
 
Honeywell International, Inc.(a)  
430,102  
6,034  
 
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.(a)  
417,372  
7,511  
 
Ingersoll-Rand PLC (Ireland)(a)  
417,011  
21,827  
 
Jabil Circuit, Inc.(a)  
444,834  
7,592  
 
Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc.(a) (b)  
418,547  
8,020  
 
Joy Global, Inc.(a)  
389,211  
3,832  
 
Kansas City Southern(a)  
406,039  
4,927  
 
L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.(a)  
422,441  
13,132  
 
Leggett & Platt, Inc.(a)  
408,274  
3,936  
 
Lockheed Martin Corp.(a)  
426,899  
20,388  
 
Masco Corp.(a)  
397,362  
14,329  
 
Molex, Inc.(a)  
420,412  
5,565  
 
Norfolk Southern Corp.(a)  
404,297  
5,114  
 
Northrop Grumman Corp.(a)  
423,439  
15,264  
 
Owens-Illinois, Inc.(a) (b)  
424,187  
6,208  
 
Pall Corp.(a)  
412,397  
4,351  
 
Parker Hannifin Corp.(a)  
415,085  
7,098  
 
Pentair Ltd. (Switzerland)(a)  
409,484  
12,828  
 
PerkinElmer, Inc.(a)  
416,910  
1,926  
 
Precision Castparts Corp.(a)  
435,295  
6,288  
 
Raytheon Co.(a)  
415,763  
12,445  
 
Republic Services, Inc.(a)  
422,383  
4,889  
 
Rockwell Automation, Inc.(a)  
406,471  
6,574  
 
Rockwell Collins, Inc.(a)  
416,857  
3,518  
 
Roper Industries, Inc.(a)  
 437,007  
6,826  
 
Ryder System, Inc.(a)  
414,953  
17,750  
 
Sealed Air Corp.(a)  
425,113  
4,656  
 
Snap-On, Inc.(a)  
416,153  
5,337  
 
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.(a)  
412,550  
3,984  
 
Stericycle, Inc.(a) (b)  
439,952  
9,332  
 
TE Connectivity Ltd. (Switzerland)(a)  
424,979  
15,995  
 
Textron, Inc.(a)  
416,670  
4,980  
 
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.(a)  
421,457  
12,725  
 
Tyco International Ltd. (Switzerland)(a)  
419,289  
2,700  
 
Union Pacific Corp.(a)  
416,556  
4,934  
 
United Parcel Service, Inc., Class B(a)  
426,691  
4,508  
 
United Technologies Corp.(a)  
418,974  
7,895  
 
Vulcan Materials Co.(a)  
382,197  
10,682  
 
Waste Management, Inc.(a)  
430,805  
4,298  
 
Waters Corp.(a) (b)  
430,015  
15,630  
 
Xylem, Inc.(a)  
421,072  
     
26,825,532  
   
Technology – 11.9%  
 
5,262  
 
Accenture PLC, Class A (Ireland)(a)  
378,654  
9,895  
 
Adobe Systems, Inc.(a) (b)  
450,817  
107,581  
 
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.(a) (b)  
438,931  
9,959  
 
Akamai Technologies, Inc.(a) (b)  
423,755  
13,127  
 
Altera Corp.(a)  
433,060  
9,429  
 
Analog Devices, Inc.(a)  
424,871  
985  
 
Apple, Inc.(a)  
390,139  
27,507  
 
Applied Materials, Inc.(a)  
410,129  
12,080  
 
Autodesk, Inc.(a) (b)  
409,995  
9,397  
 
BMC Software, Inc.(a) (b)  
424,181  
12,544  
 
Broadcom Corp., Class A(a)  
423,485  
14,999  
 
CA, Inc.(a)  
429,421  
4,315  
 
Cerner Corp.(a) (b)  
414,628  
6,922  
 
Citrix Systems, Inc.(a) (b)  
417,604  
6,731  
 
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., Class A(a) (b)  
421,428  
9,448  
 
Computer Sciences Corp.(a)  
413,539  
31,657  
 
Dell, Inc.(a)  
422,621  
4,292  
 
Dun & Bradstreet Corp.(a)  
418,255  
19,434  
 
Electronic Arts, Inc.(a) (b)  
446,399  
17,120  
 
EMC Corp.(a)  
404,374  
9,713  
 
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.(a)  
416,105  
9,480  
 
First Solar, Inc.(a) (b)  
424,040  
4,872  
 
Fiserv, Inc.(a) (b)  
425,862  
17,133  
 
Hewlett-Packard Co.(a)  
424,898  
17,010  
 
Intel Corp.(a)  
411,982  
2,096  
 
International Business Machines Corp.(a)  
400,567  
7,371  
 
Intuit, Inc.(a)  
449,853  
7,608  
 
KLA-Tencor Corp.(a)  
423,994  
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
12 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
 
       
Number  
     
of Shares  
 
Description  
Value  
   
Technology (continued)  
 
9,003  
 
Lam Research Corp.(a) (b)  
$       399,193  
11,648  
 
Linear Technology Corp.(a)  
429,112  
57,986  
 
LSI Corp.(a) (b)  
414,020  
11,445  
 
Microchip Technology, Inc.(a)  
426,326  
33,219  
 
Micron Technology, Inc.(a) (b)  
476,029  
12,322  
 
Microsoft Corp.(a)  
425,479  
11,184  
 
NetApp, Inc.(a)  
422,532  
29,537  
 
NVIDIA Corp.(a)  
414,404  
12,551  
 
Oracle Corp.(a)  
385,567  
29,052  
 
Pitney Bowes, Inc.(a)  
426,483  
6,905  
 
Qualcomm, Inc.(a)  
421,757  
9,253  
 
Red Hat, Inc.(a) (b)  
442,478  
11,286  
 
Salesforce.com, Inc.(a) (b)  
430,899  
7,208  
 
SanDisk Corp.(a) (b)  
440,408  
9,696  
 
Seagate Technology PLC (Ireland)(a)  
434,672  
7,558  
 
Teradata Corp.(a) (b)  
379,638  
24,445  
 
Teradyne, Inc.(a) (b)  
429,499  
11,947  
 
Texas Instruments, Inc.(a)  
416,592  
6,636  
 
Western Digital Corp.(a)  
412,029  
46,579  
 
Xerox Corp.(a)  
422,472  
10,902  
 
Xilinx, Inc.(a)  
431,828  
     
20,655,004  
   
Utilities – 7.3%  
 
34,293  
 
AES Corp.(a)  
411,173  
9,861  
 
AGL Resources, Inc.(a)  
422,642  
12,430  
 
Ameren Corp.(a)  
428,089  
9,315  
 
American Electric Power Co., Inc.(a)  
417,126  
17,877  
 
CenterPoint Energy, Inc.(a)  
419,931  
15,469  
 
CMS Energy Corp.(a)  
420,293  
7,331  
 
Consolidated Edison, Inc.(a)  
427,471  
7,564  
 
Dominion Resources, Inc.(a)  
429,786  
6,339  
 
DTE Energy Co.(a)  
424,776  
6,267  
 
Duke Energy Corp.(a)  
423,023  
8,990  
 
Edison International(a)  
432,958  
6,191  
 
Entergy Corp.(a)  
431,389  
13,839  
 
Exelon Corp.(a)  
427,348  
11,059  
 
FirstEnergy Corp.(a)  
412,943  
7,373  
 
Integrys Energy Group, Inc.(a)  
431,542  
5,315  
 
NextEra Energy, Inc.(a)  
433,066  
14,560  
 
NiSource, Inc.(a)  
416,998  
10,061  
 
Northeast Utilities(a)  
422,763  
15,698  
 
NRG Energy, Inc.(a)  
419,137  
20,901  
 
Pepco Holdings, Inc.(a)  
421,364  
9,385  
 
PG&E Corp.(a)  
429,176  
7,365  
 
Pinnacle West Capital Corp.(a)  
408,537  
14,551  
 
PPL Corp.(a)  
440,314  
12,990  
 
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.(a)  
 
 424,253  
8,571  
 
SCANA Corp.(a)  
   
420,836  
5,275  
 
Sempra Energy(a)  
   
431,285  
9,526  
 
Southern Co.(a)  
   
420,382  
24,459  
 
TECO Energy, Inc.(a)  
   
420,450  
10,294  
 
Wisconsin Energy Corp.(a)  
   
421,951  
14,407  
 
Xcel Energy, Inc.(a)  
   
408,294  
         
12,699,296  
   
Total Common Stocks – 121.3%  
     
   
(Cost $179,658,869)  
   
210,007,391  
   
Short Term Investments – 1.4%  
   
   
Money Market Fund – 1.4%  
     
2,488,749  
 
Dreyfus Treasury Prime Cash Management Institutional  
 
   
Shares, 12/31/2050  
     
   
(Cost $2,488,749)  
   
2,488,749  
   
Total Investments – 122.7%  
     
   
(Cost $182,147,618)  
   
212,496,140  
   
Liabilities in excess of Other Assets – 0.0%*  
 
(65,243)  
   
Total Value of Options Written – (1.9%) (Premiums  
 
   
received $2,907,556)  
   
(3,215,880)  
   
Borrowings – (20.8% of Net Assets or 16.9% of Total  
 
   
Investments)  
   
(36,000,000)  
   
Net Assets – 100.0%  
   
$173,215,017  
 
Contracts  
         
(100 shares  
   
Expiration  
Exercise  
 
per contract)  
 
Options Written (b)  
Month  
Price  
Value  
   
Call Options Written – (1.9%)  
     
640  
 
Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund  
July 2013  
$       79.00  
$      (63,360)  
2,616  
 
Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund  
July 2013  
19.00  
(166,116)  
1,572  
 
iShares Russell 2000 Index Fund  
July 2013  
96.00  
(316,758)  
1,180  
 
Industrial Select Sector SPDR Fund  
July 2013  
42.00  
(125,670)  
1,412  
 
Powershares QQQ Trust Series 1  
July 2013  
72.00  
(86,838)  
632  
 
S&P 500 Index  
July 2013  
1,605.00  
(1,390,400)  
1,359  
 
SPDR Dow Jones Industrial  
     
   
Average ETF  
July 2013  
148.00  
(318,006)  
1,449  
 
SPDR Midcap 400 ETF Trust  
July 2013  
210.00  
(514,395)  
661  
 
SPDR S&P Retail ETF  
July 2013  
76.00  
(100,472)  
900  
 
SPDR S&P Retail ETF  
July 2013  
77.00  
(97,280)  
1,626  
 
Technology Select Sector SPDR  
     
   
Fund  
July 2013  
31.00  
(36,585)  
   
Total Value of Call Options Written – (1.9%)  
   
   
Premiums received ($2,907,556)  
   
$(3,215,880)  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 13
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
 
 
NV – Publicly Traded Company
 
PLC – Public Limited Company
 
REIT – Real Estate Investment Trust
 
* Less than 0.1%.
 
(a) All or a portion of these securities have been physically segregated in connection with borrowings. As of June 30, 2013, the total amount segregated was $212,484,608.
 
(b) Non-income producing security.
 
(c) When-issued or delayed delivery security.
 
Securities are classified by sectors that represent broad grouping of industries.
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
14 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 
 
 
     
Assets  
   
Investments, at value (cost $182,147,618)  
$ 212,496,140  
Receivable for securities sold  
  489,456  
Dividends receivable  
  241,863  
Other assets  
  7,118  
Total assets  
  213,234,577  
Liabilities  
     
Borrowings  
  36,000,000  
Options written, at value (premiums received of $2,907,556)  
  3,215,880  
Payable for securities purchased  
  392,297  
Advisory fee payable  
  158,642  
Custodian bank  
  24,009  
Interest due on borrowings  
  21,328  
Administration fee payable  
  4,352  
Accrued expenses and other liabilities  
  203,052  
Total liabilities  
  40,019,560  
Net Assets  
$ 173,215,017  
Composition of Net Assets  
     
Common shares, $.01 par value per share; unlimited number of shares authorized,  
     
8,770,121 shares issued and outstanding  
$ 87,701  
Additional paid-in capital  
  156,387,971  
Accumulated net realized loss on investments and options  
  (5,896,637 )  
Accumulated net unrealized appreciation on investments and options  
  30,040,198  
Distributions in excess of net investment income  
  (7,404,216 )  
Net Assets  
$ 173,215,017  
Net Asset Value (based on 8,770,121 common shares outstanding)  
$ 19.75  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 15
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS For the six months ended June 30, 2013 (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 

 
 
 
           
Investment Income  
         
Dividends (net of foreign withholding taxes of $1,598)  
$ 1,675,495        
Less return of capital distributions received  
  (1,037 )        
Total income  
        $ 1,674,458  
Expenses  
             
Advisory fee  
  984,025          
Interest expense  
  152,677          
Professional fees  
  63,680          
Custodian fee  
  36,794          
Fund accounting  
  35,871          
Trustees' fees and expenses  
  32,762          
Administrative fee  
  26,966          
Licensing fee  
  24,862          
Printing expense  
  16,441          
Insurance  
  10,935          
NYSE listing fee  
  10,498          
Transfer agent fee  
  8,874          
Miscellaneous  
  433          
Total expenses  
          1,404,818  
Net investment income  
          269,640  
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments and Options  
             
Net realized gain (loss) on:  
             
Investments  
          15,614,326  
Options  
          (14,579,519 )  
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:  
             
Investments  
          12,860,257  
Options  
          (492,466 )  
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments and options  
          13,402,598  
Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations  
        $ 13,672,238  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
16 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
  June 30, 2013
 

 
 
                 
             
For the Period
 
For the Six Months
   
For the Period
   
October 27, 2011**
 
Ended June 30, 2013
   
Year Ended
   
through
 
 
(unaudited)
   
December 31, 2012*
   
June 30, 2012
 
Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations  
               
Net investment income  
$ 269,640     $ 1,062,564     $ 757,920  
Net realized gain (loss) on investments and options  
  1,034,807       (6,890,949 )       2,783,860  
Net change in unrealized appreciation on investments and options  
  12,367,791       11,984,063       5,688,344  
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations  
  13,672,238       6,155,678       9,230,124  
Distributions to Shareholders  
                     
From and in excess of net investment income  
  (7,673,856 )       (962,285 )       (3,695,304 )  
Return of capital  
        (6,705,060 )       (3,965,531 )  
    (7,673,856 )       (7,667,345 )       (7,660,835 )  
Capital Share Transactions  
                     
Net proceeds from the issuance of common shares  
              167,125,000  
Reinvestment of dividends  
        283,929        
Common share offering costs charged to paid-in capital  
              (350,000 )  
Net increase from capital share transactions  
        283,929       166,775,000  
Total increase (decrease) in net assets  
  5,998,382       (1,227,738 )       168,344,289  
Net Assets:  
                     
Beginning of period  
  167,216,635       168,444,373       100,084  
End of period (including distributions in excess of net  
                     
investment income of $7,404,216, $0 and $0, respectively)  
$ 173,215,017     $ 167,216,635     $ 168,444,373  
 
*      
Fiscal year end changed from June 30 to December 31.
**      
Commencement of investment operations
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 17
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS For the six months ended June 30, 2013 (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 

 
       
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:  
     
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations  
  $ 13,672,238  
Adjustments to Reconcile Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations to  
       
Net Cash Provided by Operating and Investing Activities:  
       
Net unrealized appreciation on investments  
    (12,860,257 )  
Net unrealized depreciation on options  
    492,466  
Net realized gain on investments  
    (15,614,326 )  
Net realized loss on options  
    14,579,519  
Purchase of long-term investments  
    (156,886,024 )  
Cost of written options closed  
    (29,642,617 )  
Premiums received on call options written  
    16,029,715  
Proceeds from sale of long-term investments  
    175,078,430  
Net purchases of short-term investments  
    (239,056 )  
Increase in dividends receivable  
    (36,065 )  
Increase in receivable for securities sold  
    (82,660 )  
Increase in other assets  
    (7,118 )  
Decrease in tax reclaims receivable  
    1,308  
Decrease in investments purchased payable  
    (14,253 )  
Decrease in dividends payable  
    (761,936 )  
Decrease in advisory fee payable  
    (13,638 )  
Increase in custodian bank  
    1,680  
Decrease in administration fee payable  
    (366 )  
Decrease in interest due on borrowings  
    (15,804 )  
Return of capital distributions received  
    1,037  
Decrease in accrued expenses and other liabilities  
    (8,417 )  
Net Cash Provided by Operating and Investing Activities  
    3,673,856  
Cash Flows From Financing Activities:  
       
Proceeds from borrowings  
    45,500,000  
Payments made on borrowings  
    (41,500,000 )  
Distributions to shareholders  
    (7,673,856 )  
Net Cash Used in Financing Activities  
    (3,673,856 )  
Net change in cash  
     
Cash at Beginning of Period  
     
Cash at End of Period  
  $  
Supplemental Disclosure of Cash Flow Information: Cash paid during the period for interest  
  $ 168,481  
Supplemental Disclosure of Non Cash Operating Activity: Options exercised during the period  
  $ 908,708  
 
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
18 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
  June 30, 2013
 
 
 
 
                   
               
For the Period
 
   
For the Six Months
   
For the Period
   
October 27, 2011**
 
Per share operating performance  
 
Ended June 30, 2013
   
Year Ended
   
through
 
for a common share outstanding throughout the period  
 
(unaudited)
   
December 31, 2012*
   
June 30, 2012
 
Net asset value, beginning of period  
  $ 19.07     $ 19.24     $ 19.10 (a)  
Investment operations  
                       
Net investment income (b)  
    0.03       0.12       0.09  
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments and options  
    1.53       0.59       0.97  
Total from investment operations  
    1.56       0.71       1.06  
Common shares’ offering expenses charged to paid-in-capital  
                (0.04 )  
Distributions to Shareholders  
                       
From and in excess of net investment income  
    (0.88 )       (0.11 )       (0.42 )  
Return of capital  
          (0.77 )       (0.46 )  
Total distributions to shareholders  
    (0.88 )       (0.88 )       (0.88 )  
Net asset value, end of period  
  $ 19.75     $ 19.07     $ 19.24  
Market value, end of period  
  $ 18.19     $ 17.73     $ 18.61  
Total investment return (c)  
                       
Net asset value  
    8.22 %       3.69 %       5.30 %  
Market value  
    7.46 %       -0.35 %       -2.57 %  
Ratios and supplemental data  
                       
Net assets end of period (thousands)  
  $ 173,215     $ 167,217     $ 168,444  
Ratios to Average Net Assets:  
                       
Total expenses, excluding interest expense  
    1.46 % (d)       1.54 % (d)       1.59 % (d)  
Total expenses, including interest expense  
    1.64 % (d)       1.78 % (d)       1.80 % (d)  
Net investment income, including interest expense  
    0.32 % (d)       1.25 % (d)       0.71 % (d)  
Portfolio Turnover (e)  
    79 %       54 %       31 %  
Senior Indebtedness:  
                       
Total Borrowings outstanding (in thousands)  
  $ 36,000     $ 32,000     $ 34,000  
Asset Coverage per $1,000 of indebtedness (f)  
  $ 5,812     $ 6,226     $ 5,954  
 
 
*      
Fiscal year end changed from June 30 to December 31.
**      
Commencement of investment operations.
(a)      
Before deduction of offering expenses charged to capital.
(b)      
Based on average shares outstanding.
(c)      
Total investment return is calculated assuming a purchase of a common share at the beginning of the period and a sale on the last day of the period reported either at net asset value (NAV) or market price per share. Dividends and distributions are assumed to be reinvested at NAV for NAV returns or the prices obtained under the Fund's Dividend Reinvestment Plan market value returns. Total investment return does not reflect brokerage commissions. A return calculated for a period of less than one year is not annualized.
(d)      
Annualized.
(e)      
Portfolio turnover is not annualized for periods of less than one year.
(f)      
Calculated by subtracting the Fund's total liabilities (not including borrowings) from the Fund's total assets and dividing by the total borrowings.
 
See notes to financial statements.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 19
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013
 

 
Note 1 – Organization:
Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund (the “Fund”) was organized as a Delaware statutory trust on July 11, 2011. The Fund is registered as a diversified, closed-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”).
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to provide a high level of risk-adjusted total return with an emphasis on current income. There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objectives. The Fund’s investment objective is considered fundamental and may not be changed without shareholder approval.
 
Note 2 – Accounting Policies:
The preparation of the financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Actual results could differ from these estimates.
 
The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the Fund.
 
(a) Valuation of Investments
The Fund values equity securities at the last reported sale price on the principal exchange or in the principal over-the-counter (“OTC”) market in which such securities are traded, as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) on the day the securities are being valued or, if there are no sales, at the mean between the last available bid and ask prices on that day. Securities traded on the NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ Official Closing Price. Preferred stocks are valued at their sales price as of the close of the exchange on which they are traded. Preferred stocks for which the last price is not available are valued at the mean between the last available bid and ask prices on that day. Equity index options are valued at the mean between the last available bid and ask prices on the primary exchange on which they are traded. Exchange-traded options are valued at the mean of the best bid and ask prices at the close on those exchanges on which they are traded. The Fund values money market funds at net asset value. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of 60 days or less, at the time of purchase, are valued at amortized cost, which approximated market value.
 
For those securities where quotations or prices are not available, the valuations are determined in accordance with procedures established in good faith by management and approved by the Board of Trustees (“Trustees”). A valuation committee consisting of representatives from investments, fund administration, legal and compliance is responsible for the oversight of the valuation process of the Fund and convenes monthly, or more frequently as needed. The valuation committee reviews monthly Level 3 fair valued securities methodology, price overrides, broker quoted securities price source changes, illiquid securities, unchanged valuations, halted securities, price challenges, fair valued securities sold and back testing trade prices in relation to prior day closing prices. On a quarterly basis, the valuations and methodologies of all Level 3 fair valued securities are presented to the Fund’s Trustees.
 
Valuations in accordance with these procedures are intended to reflect each security’s (or asset’s) “fair value.” Fair value is defined as the price that the Fund would receive to sell an investment or pay to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction with an independent buyer in the principal market, or in the absence of a principal market, the most advantageous market for the investment or liability. Each such determination is based on a consideration of all relevant factors, which are likely to vary from one pricing context to another. Examples of such factors may include, but are not limited to: (i) the type of security, (ii) the initial cost of the security, (iii) the existence of any contractual restrictions on the security’s disposition, (iv) the price and extent of public trading in similar securities of the issuer or of comparable companies, (v) quotations or evaluated prices from broker-dealers and/or pricing services, (vi) information obtained from the issuer, analysts, and/or the appropriate stock exchange (for exchange traded securities), (vii) an analysis of the company’s financial statements, and (viii) an evaluation of the forces that influence the issuer and the market(s) in which the security is purchased and sold (e.g. the existence of pending merger activity, public offerings or tender offers that might affect the value of the security).
 
There are three different categories for valuations. Level 1 valuations are those based upon quoted prices in active markets. Level 2 valuations are those based upon quoted prices in inactive markets or based upon significant observable inputs (e.g. yield curves; benchmark interest rates; indices). Level 3 valuations are those based upon unobservable inputs (e.g. discounted cash flow analysis; non-market based methods used to determine fair valuation).
 
The Fund values Level 1 securities using readily available market quotations in active markets. Money market funds are valued at net asset value. The fund values Level 2 fixed income securities using independent pricing providers who employ matrix pricing models utilizing market prices, broker quotes and prices of securities with comparable maturities and qualities. The Fund values Level 2 equity securities using various observable market inputs as described above. The Fund did not have any Level 2 or Level 3 securities during the six months ended June 30, 2013.
 
Transfers between valuation levels, if any, are in comparison to the valuation levels at the end of the previous fiscal year, and are effective as of the beginning of the period.
 
 
20 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
 
The following table represents the Fund’s investments carried on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities by caption and by level within the fair value hierarchy at June 30, 2013.
 
                         
Description  
                       
(value in $000s)  
 
Level 1
   
Level 2
   
Level 3
   
Total
 
Assets:  
                       
Common Stocks  
  $ 210,007     $     $     $ 210,007  
Money Market Fund  
    2,489                   2,489  
Total  
  $ 212,496     $     $     $ 212,496  
Liabilities:  
                               
Call Options Written  
  $ 3,216     $     $     $ 3,216  
Total  
  $ 3,216     $     $     $ 3,216  
 
During the six months ended June 30, 2013, there were no transfers between levels.
 
(b) Investment Transactions and Investment Income
Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date. Realized gains and losses on investments are determined on the identified cost basis. Dividend income is recorded net of applicable withholding taxes on the ex-dividend date and interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Discounts on debt securities purchased are accreted to interest income over the lives of the respective securities using the effective interest method. Premiums on debt securities purchased are amortized to interest income up to the next call date of the respective securities using the effective interest method.
 
(c) Options
The Fund will utilize a call option writing strategy to seek to generate current income and potentially mitigate overall portfolio volatility. The option strategy will include writing (i.e. selling) call options on securities indices, exchange-traded funds that track securities indices, baskets of securities and other instruments, which will include securities that are not held by the Fund.
 
An option on a security is a contract that gives the holder of the option, in return for a premium, the right to buy from (in the case of a call) or sell to (in the case of a put) the writer of the option the security underlying the option at a specific exercise or “strike” price. The writer of an option on a security has an obligation upon exercise of the option to deliver the underlying security upon payment of the exercise price (in the case of a call) or to pay the exercise price upon delivery of the underlying security (in the case of a put). When an option is written, the premium received is recorded as an asset with an equal liability and is subsequently marked to market to reflect the current market value of the option written. These liabilities are reflected as options written in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Premiums received from writing options which expire unexercised are recorded on the expiration date as a realized gain. The difference between the premium received and the amount paid on effecting a closing purchase transaction, including brokerage commissions, is also treated as a realized gain, or if the premium is less than the amount paid for the closing purchase transactions, as a realized loss. If an option is exercised, the premium is added to the cost of the purchase (in the case of a put) or proceeds from the sale of the underlying security (in case of a call) in determining whether there has been a realized gain or loss.
 
As the seller of an index call option, the Fund receives cash (the premium) from the purchaser. The purchaser of an index call option has the right to any appreciation in the value of the index over a fixed price (the exercise price) on or before a certain date in the future (the expiration date). The Fund, in effect, agrees to sell the potential appreciation in the value of the relevant index over the exercise price in exchange for the premium. If, at or before expiration, the purchaser exercises the call option sold by the Fund, the Fund will pay the purchaser the difference between the cash value of the index and the exercise price of the index option (the exercise settlement amount). The premium, the exercise price and the market value of the index determine the gain or loss realized by the Fund as the seller of the index call option.
 
Options on an index differ from options on securities because (i) the exercise of an index option requires cash payments and does not involve the actual purchase or sale of securities, (ii) the holder of an index call option has the right to receive cash (instead of securities) upon exercise of the option in an amount equal to the amount by which the level of the index exceeds the exercise price and (iii) index options reflect price-fluctuations in a group of securities or segments of the securities market rather than price fluctuations in a single security.
 
(d) Distributions
The Fund declares and pays quarterly distributions to shareholders. Any net realized long-term capital gains are distributed annually. Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date. The amount and timing of distributions are determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP.
 
Note 3 – Investment Advisory Agreement, Sub-Advisory Agreement and Other Agreements:
Pursuant to an Investment Advisory Agreement between the Fund and Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC (“GFIA” or the “Adviser”), the Adviser furnishes offices, necessary facilities and equipment, provides personnel, including certain officers required for the Fund’s administrative management and compensates the officers or trustees of the Fund who are affiliates of the Adviser. As compensation for these services, the Fund pays the Adviser a fee, payable monthly, in an amount equal to 1.00% of the Fund’s average daily managed assets (net assets plus any assets attributable to financial leverage).
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 21
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
The Fund and the Adviser have entered into a Sub-Advisory Agreement (the “Options Strategy Sub-Advisory Agreement”) with Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC (“GPIM”). GPIM is responsible for the management of the Fund’s options strategy. Under the terms of the Options Strategy Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Adviser pays monthly to GPIM a fee at the annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund’s average daily managed assets.
 
The Fund and the Adviser have also entered into a Sub-Advisory Agreement (the “Equity Portfolio Sub-Advisory Agreement”) with Security Investors, LLC (“Security Investors”). Security Investors is responsible for the management of the Fund’s portfolio of equity securities. Under the terms of the Equity Portfolio Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Adviser pays monthly to Security Investors a fee at the annual rate of 0.15% of the Fund’s average daily managed assets.
 
Certain officers and trustees of the Fund may also be officers, directors and/or employees of the Adviser, GPIM or Security Investors. The Fund does not compensate its officers or trustees who are officers, directors and/or employees of the aforementioned firms.
 
Prior to May 14, 2013, under a separate Fund Administration Agreement (the “Administration Agreement”), the Adviser provided fund administration services to the Fund. As compensation for services performed under the Administration Agreement, the Adviser received a fund administration fee payable monthly at the annual rate set forth below as a percentage of the average daily managed assets of the Fund.
 
   
Managed Assets  
Rate  
First $200,000,000  
0.0275%  
Next $300,000,000  
0.0200%  
Next $500,000,000  
0.0150%  
Over $1,000,000,000  
0.0100%  
 
Effective May 14, 2013, the Trustees approved Rydex Fund Services, LLC (“RFS”) as the Administrator of the Fund. Both RFS and GFIA are affiliates of Guggenheim Partners, LLC, a global diversified financial services firm. There is no impact to the Fund as a result of this change.
 
For purposes of calculating the fees payable under the foregoing agreements, “average daily managed assets” means the average daily value of the Fund’s total assets minus the sum of its accrued liabilities. “Total assets” means all of the Fund’s assets and is not limited to its investment securities. “Accrued liabilities” means all of the Fund’s liabilities other than borrowings for investment purposes.
 
The Bank of New York Mellon (“BNY”) acts as the Fund’s custodian and accounting agent. As custodian, BNY is responsible for the custody of the Fund’s assets. As accounting agent, BNY is responsible for maintaining the books and records of the Fund’s securities and cash. On May 14, 2013, the Trustees approved RFS to replace BNY as the Fund’s accounting agent effective January 1, 2014.
 
Note 4 – Federal Income Taxes:
The Fund intends to comply with the requirements of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, applicable to regulated investment companies. Accordingly, no provision for U.S. federal income taxes is required. In addition, by distributing substantially all of its ordinary income and long-term capital gains, if any, during each calendar year, the Fund intends not to be subject to U.S. federal excise tax.
 
Information on the components of investments, excluding purchased and written options, and net assets as of June 30, 2013, is as follows:
 
         
     
Net Tax  
Net Tax  
Cost of  
Gross Tax  
Gross Tax  
Unrealized  
Unrealized  
Investments for  
Unrealized  
Unrealized  
Appreciation  
Depreciation on  
Tax Purposes  
Appreciation  
Depreciation  
on Investments  
Derivatives  
$182,335,931  
$35,302,230  
$(5,142,022)  
$30,160,208  
$(308,324)  
 
The difference between book and tax basis unrealized appreciation (depreciation) is primarily attributable to the tax deferral of losses on wash sales.
 
Tax components of the following balances as of December 31, 2012, (the most recent fiscal year for federal income tax purposes) are as follows:
 
   
Undistributed Ordinary  
Undistributed Long-Term  
Income/(Accumulated  
Gains/(Accumulated  
Ordinary Loss)  
Capital Loss)  
$(0)  
$(7,024,409)  
 
For the period ended December 31, 2012, the tax character of distributions paid to shareholders as reflected in the Statement of Changes in Net Assets, was as follows:
 
   
Distributions paid from  
2012  
Ordinary income  
$   962,285  
Return of capital  
6,705,060  
 
 
During the period ended June 30, 2013, distributions of $7,673,856 were paid to shareholders. The classification for these distributions for federal income tax purposes will be determined after December 31, 2013.
 
 
22 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013
 
For all open tax years and all major jurisdictions, management of the Fund has concluded that there are no significant uncertain tax positions that would require recognition in the financial statements. Uncertain tax positions are tax positions taken or expected to be taken in the course of preparing Fund’s tax returns that would not meet a more-likely-than-not threshold of being sustained by the applicable tax authority and would be recorded as a tax expense in the current year. Open tax years are those that are open for examination by taxing authorities (i.e. generally the last four tax year ends and the interim tax period since then). Furthermore, management of the Fund is also not aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months.
 
Note 5 – Investments in Securities:
During the six months ended June 30, 2013, the cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments, excluding written options with maturities of less than one year and short-term investments were $156,886,024 and $175,078,430, respectively.
 
Note 6 – Derivatives:
The Fund will utilize a call option writing strategy to seek to generate current income and potentially mitigate overall portfolio volatility. As this strategy involves uncovered option writing, it may result in less volatility mitigation than, and may be subject to more risks compared to, option strategies involving writing options on securities held by the Fund.
 
There are various risks associated with the Fund’s call option writing strategy. The purchaser of an index option written by the Fund has the right to any appreciation in the cash value of the index over the strike price on the expiration date. Therefore, as the writer of a covered index call option, the Fund forgoes the opportunity to profit from increases in the index over the strike price of the option. However, the Fund has retained the risk of loss (net of premiums received) should the price of the index decline. Similarly, as the writer of a covered call option on a security or basket of securities held in the Fund’s portfolio, the Fund forgoes, during the option’s life, the opportunity to profit from increases in the market value of the security or securities covering the call option above the sum of the premium and the exercise price of the call but has retained the risk of loss (net of premiums received) should the price of the underlying security decline.
 
There are special risks associated with uncovered option writing (i.e. writing options on securities not held in the Fund’s portfolio, on indices or on exchange traded funds comprised of such securities or that track such indices), which expose the Fund to potentially significant loss. As the writer of an uncovered call option, the Fund has no risk of loss should the price of the underlying security or index decline, but bears unlimited risk of loss should the price of the underlying security or index increase above the exercise price.
 
To the extent that the Fund purchases options, the Fund will be subject to the following additional risks. If a put or call option purchased by the Fund is not sold when it has remaining value, and if the market price of the underlying security remains equal to or greater than the exercise price (in the case of a put), or remains less than or equal to the exercise price (in the case of a call), the Fund will lose its entire investment in the option. Also, where a put or call option on a particular security is purchased to hedge against price movements in a related security, the price of the put or call option may move more or less than the price of the related security. If restrictions on exercise were imposed, the Fund might be unable to exercise an option it had purchased. If the Fund were unable to close out an option that it had purchased on a security, it would have to exercise the option in order to realize any profit or the option may expire worthless.
 
Transactions in written call option contracts for the six months ended June 30, 2013, were as follows:
 
             
   
Number of
   
Premiums
 
   
Contracts
   
Received
 
Options outstanding, beginning of period  
    11,243     $ 2,849,647  
Options written during the period  
    122,907       16,029,715  
Options expired during the period  
    (5,891 )       (708,581 )  
Options closed during the period  
    (105,021 )       (14,354,517 )  
Options exercised during the period  
    (9,191 )       (908,708 )  
Options outstanding, end of the period  
    14,047     $ 2,907,556  
 
 
The following table presents the types of derivatives in the Fund by location as presented on the Statement of Assets Liabilities at June 30, 2013.
 
           
Statement of Assets and Liabilities Presentation of Fair Values of Derivatives (in $000s):  
 
Asset Derivatives  
 
Liability Derivatives  
 
Statement  
   
Statement  
 
 
of Assets  
   
of Assets  
 
 
and Liabilities  
   
and Liabilities  
 
 
Location  
Fair Value  
 
Location  
Fair Value  
Equity risk  
$ –  
 
Options  
 
       
Written,  
 
       
at value  
$ 3,216  
Total  
 
$ –  
   
$ 3,216  
 
Summary of Derivatives Information
 
The following table presents the effect of Derivatives Instruments on the Statement of Operations for the six months ended June 30, 2013.
 
     
Effect of Derivative Instruments on the Statement of Operations (in $000s):
 
 
Amount of Net  
Change in Net  
 
Realized Loss  
Unrealized (Depreciation)  
 
on Derivatives  
on Derivatives  
 
Options  
Options  
Equity risk  
$(14,580)  
$(492)  
Total  
$(14,580)  
$(492)  
 
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 23
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013

 
Note 7 – Leverage:
 
Borrowings
On November 3, 2011, the Fund entered into a committed credit facility agreement with an approved counterparty (the “Counterparty”). The Counterparty has agreed to provide secured financing to the Fund up to a maximum of $50,000,000 and the Fund will provide pledged collateral to the Counterparty. Interest on the amount borrowed is based on the 1-month LIBOR plus 0.75%. An unused commitment fee of 0.10% is charged on the difference between the amount available to borrow under the credit agreement and the actual amount borrowed. At June 30, 2013, there was $36,000,000 outstanding in connection with the Fund’s credit facility. The average daily amount of borrowings on the credit facility during the six months ended June 30, 2013, was $25,693,370 with a related average interest rate of 0.95%. The maximum amount outstanding during the six months ended June 30, 2013 was $37,500,000. As of June 30, 2013, the market value of the securities segregated as collateral is $212,484,608.
 
The credit facility agreement includes usual and customary covenants. These covenants impose on the Fund asset coverage requirements, collateral requirements, investment strategy requirements, and certain financial obligations. These covenants place limits or restrictions on the Fund’s ability to (i) enter into additional indebtedness with a party other than the lender, (ii) change its fundamental investment policy, or (iii) pledge to any other party, other than to the lender, securities owned or held by the Fund over which BNY has a lien. In addition, the Fund is required to deliver financial information to the lender within established deadlines, maintain an asset coverage ratio (as defined in Section 18(g) of the 1940 Act) greater than 300%, comply with the rules of the stock exchange on which its share are listed, and maintain its classification as a “closed-end fund company” as defined in the 1940 Act.
 
Note 8 – Capital:
 
Common Shares
The Fund has an unlimited amount of common shares, $0.01 par value, authorized and 8,770,121 issued and outstanding.
 
Transactions in common shares were as follows:
 
     
 
Six Months ended  
Period ended  
 
June 30, 2013  
December 31, 2012  
Beginning Shares  
8,770,121
8,755,240
Shares issued through dividend reinvestment  
14,881
Common shares issued through offering  
Ending Shares  
8,770,121
8,770,121
 
At June 30, 2013, Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC, an affiliate of the Adviser, owned 5,870 shares of the Fund.
 
Note 9 – Indemnifications:
In the normal course of business, the Fund enters into contracts that contain a variety of representations, which provide general indemnifications. The Fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown, as this would require future claims that may be made against the Fund that have not yet occurred. However, the Fund expects the risk of loss to be remote.
 
Note 10 – Subsequent Event:
The Fund evaluated subsequent events through the date the financial statements were available for issue and determined there were no additional material events that would require disclosure in the Fund’s financial statements, except as noted below.
 
On July 1, 2013, the Fund declared a quarterly dividend in the amount of $0.4375 per share. The dividend was payable on July 31, 2013 to shareholders of record on July 15, 2013.
 
 
24 | GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013

 
Federal Income Tax Information
In January 2014, you will be advised on IRS Form 1099 DIV or substitute 1099 DIV as to the federal tax status of the distributions received by you in the calendar year 2013.
 
Results of Shareholder Votes
The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the Fund was held on April 3, 2013. Common shareholders voted on the election of Trustees.
 
With regards to the election of the following Trustees by common shareholders of the Fund:
 
       
 
# of Shares in Favor  
# of Shares Against  
# of Shares Withheld  
Donald C. Cacciapaglia  
7,757,706  
33,812  
198,442  
Robert B. Karn III  
7,740,612  
46,510  
202,838  
Ronald E. Toupin, Jr.  
7,743,489  
46,002  
200,469  
 
The other Trustees of the Fund whose terms did not expire in 2013 are Randall C. Barnes, Roman Friedrich III and Ronald A. Nyberg.
 
Trustees
 
The Trustees of the Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund and their principal occupations during the past five years:
 
         
Name, Address*, Year  
   
Number of
 
of Birth and  
Term of Office**  
 
Portfolios in the
 
Position(s) Held  
and Length  
Principal Occupations during the Past Five Years and  
Fund Complex***
Other Directorships  
with Registrant  
of Time Served  
Other Affiliations  
Overseen by Trustee
Held by Trustee  
Independent Trustees:  
       
Randall C. Barnes  
Since 2011  
Private Investor (2001-present). Formerly, Senior Vice President &  
50  
None.  
Year of Birth: 1951  
 
Treasurer, PepsiCo., Inc. (1993-1997), President, Pizza Hut International  
   
Trustee  
 
(1991-1993) and Senior Vice President, Strategic Planning and New  
   
   
Business Development of PepsiCo., Inc. (1987-1990).  
   
Roman Friedrich III  
Since 2011  
Founder and President of Roman Friedrich & Company, a US and  
46  
Director of First Americas Gold  
Year of Birth: 1946  
 
Canadian-based business, which provides investment banking to the  
 
Corp. (2012-present), Zincore  
Trustee  
 
mining industry (1998-present). Formerly, Senior Managing  
 
Metals, Inc. (2009–present).  
   
Director of MLV & Co., LLC, an investment bank and institutional  
 
Previously, Director of Blue Sky  
   
broker-dealer specializing in capital intensive industries such as energy,  
 
Uranium Corp. (formerly Windstorm  
   
metals and mining (2010-2011).  
 
Resources Inc.) (April 2011–July  
       
2012); Director of Axiom Gold and  
       
Silver Corp. (2011-2012), Stratagold  
       
Corp.(2003-2009); Gateway Gold  
       
Corp. (2004-2008) and GFM  
       
Resources Ltd. (2005-2010).  
Robert B. Karn III  
Since 2011  
Consultant (1998-present). Formerly, Arthur Andersen (1965-1997) and  
46  
Director of Peabody Energy  
Year of Birth: 1942  
 
Managing Partner, Financial and Economic Consulting, St. Louis  
 
Company (2003-present), and GP  
Trustee  
 
office (1987-1997).  
 
Natural Resource Partners LLC  
       
(2002-present).  
Ronald A. Nyberg  
Since 2011  
Partner of Nyberg & Cassioppi, LLC, a law firm specializing in corporate  
52  
None.  
Year of Birth: 1953  
 
law, estate planning and business transactions (2000-present). Formerly,  
   
Trustee  
 
Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary of  
   
   
Van Kampen Investments (1982-1999).  
   
Ronald E. Toupin, Jr.  
Since 2011  
Portfolio Consultant (2010-present). Formerly, Vice President, Manager  
49  
Trustee, Bennett Group of Funds  
Year of Birth: 1958  
 
and Portfolio Manager of Nuveen Asset Management (1998-1999), Vice  
 
(2011-present).  
Trustee  
 
President of Nuveen Investment Advisory Corp. (1992-1999), Vice President  
   
   
and Manager of Nuveen Unit Investment Trusts (1991-1999), and Assistant  
   
   
Vice President and Portfolio Manager of Nuveen Unit Investment Trusts  
   
   
(1988-1999), each of John Nuveen & Co., Inc. (1982-1999).  
   
 
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 25
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION (Unaudited) continued
  June 30, 2013


 
         
Name, Address*, Year  
   
Number of  
 
of Birth and  
Term of Office**  
 
Portfolios in the  
 
Position(s) Held  
and Length  
Principal Occupations during the Past Five Years and  
Fund Complex***  
Other Directorships  
with Registrant  
of Time Served  
Other Affiliations  
Overseen by Trustee  
Held by Trustee  
Interested Trustee:  
       
Donald C. Cacciapaglia†  
Since 2012  
Senior Managing Director of Guggenheim Investments (2010-present);  
214  
Trustee, Rydex Dynamic Funds,  
Year of Birth: 1951  
 
Chief Executive Officer of Guggenheim Funds Services, LLC (2012-  
 
Rydex ETF Trust, Rydex Series Funds  
Trustee,  
 
present); Chief Executive Officer (2012-present) and President (2010-  
 
and Rydex Variable Trust  
Chief Executive Officer  
 
present), Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC and Guggenheim Funds  
 
(2012-present); Independent Board  
   
Investment Advisors, LLC; Chief Executive Officer of certain funds of the  
 
Member, Equitrust Life Insurance  
   
Fund Complex (2012-present); President and Director of SBL Fund,  
 
Company, Guggenheim Life and  
   
Security Equity Fund, Security Income Fund, Security Large Cap Value  
 
Annuity Company, and Paragon Life  
   
Fund, and Security Mid Cap Growth Fund (2012-present); President, CEO  
 
Insurance Company of Indiana  
   
and Trustee of Rydex Dynamic Funds, Rydex ETF Trust, Rydex Series Funds  
 
(2011-present).  
   
and Rydex Variable Trust (2012-present). Formerly, Chairman and CEO of  
   
   
Channel Capital Group Inc. and Channel Capital Group LLC (2002-2010).  
   
 
Address for all Trustees: 2455 Corporate West Drive, Lisle, IL 60532
 
** 
After a Trustee’s initial term, each Trustee is expected to serve a three-year term concurrent with the class of Trustees for which he serves:
 
-  
Messrs. Barnes and Cacciapaglia are Class I Trustees. Class I Trustees are expected to stand for re-election at the Fund’s annual meeting of shareholders for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2014.
 
-  
Messrs. Friedrich and Nyberg are Class II Trustees. Class II Trustees are expected to stand for re-election at the Fund’s annual meeting of shareholders for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2015.
 
-  
Messrs. Karn and Toupin are Class III Trustees. Class III Trustees are expected to stand for re-election at the Fund’s annual meeting of shareholders for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2016.
 
*** 
As of period end. The Guggenheim Investments Fund Complex consists of U.S. registered investment companies advised or serviced by Guggenheim Funds Investments Advisors, LLC or Guggenheim Funds Distributors, Inc. and/or its affiliates. The Guggenheim Investments Fund Complex is overseen by multiple Boards of Trustees.
 
† 
Mr. Donald C. Cacciapaglia is an “interested person” (as defined in section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act) (“Interested Trustee”) of the Trust because of his position as the President and CEO of the Adviser.
 
Principal Executive Officers
The Principal Executive Officers of the Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund who are not trustees, and their principal occupations during the past five years:
 
     
Name, Address*, Year of Birth and  
Term of Office** and  
Principal Occupations During the Past Five Years and  
Position(s) Held with Registrant  
Length of Time Served  
Other Affiliations  
Amy J. Lee  
Since 2013***  
Managing Director, Guggenheim Investments (2012-present); Senior Vice President & Secretary, Security Investors, LLC  
Year of Birth: 1961  
 
(2010-present); Secretary & Chief Compliance Officer, Security Distributors, Inc. (1987-2012); Vice President, Associate  
Chief Legal Officer  
 
General Counsel & Assistant Secretary, Security Benefit Life Insurance Company and Security Benefit Corporation (1987-  
   
2012); Vice President & Secretary, Rydex Series Funds, Rydex ETF Trust, Rydex Dynamic Funds, and Rydex Variable Trust  
   
(2008-present). Officer of certain funds in the Fund Complex (2012-present).  
John L. Sullivan  
Since 2011  
Senior Managing Director – Fund Administration, Guggenheim Investments (2010-present). Chief Financial Officer,  
Year of Birth: 1955  
 
Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer of certain funds in the Fund Complex. Formerly, Chief Compliance Officer,  
Chief Financial  
 
Van Kampen Funds (2004-2010). Head of Fund Accounting, Morgan Stanley Investment Management (2002-2004). Chief  
Officer, Chief Accounting  
 
Financial Officer, Treasurer, Van Kampen Funds (1996-2004).  
Officer and Treasurer  
   
Joanna M. Catalucci  
Since 2012  
Managing Director of Compliance and Fund Board Relations, Guggenheim Investments (2012-present). Formerly, Chief  
Year of birth: 1966  
 
Compliance Officer & Secretary, SBL Fund; Security Equity Fund; Security Income Fund; Security Large Cap Value Fund  
Chief Compliance Officer  
 
& Security Mid Cap Growth Fund; Vice President, Rydex Holdings, LLC; Vice President, Security Benefit Asset  
   
Management Holdings, LLC; and Senior Vice President & Chief Compliance Officer, Security Investors, LLC (2010-2012);  
   
Security Global Investors, LLC, Senior Vice President (2010-2011); Rydex Advisors, LLC (f/k/a PADCO Advisors, Inc.) and  
   
Rydex Advisors II, LLC (f/k/a PADCO Advisors II, Inc.), Chief Compliance Officer and Senior Vice President (2010-2011);  
   
Rydex Capital Partners I, LLC & Rydex Capital Partners II, LLC, Chief Compliance Officer (2006-2007); and Rydex Fund  
   
Services, LLC (f/k/a Rydex Fund Services, Inc.), Vice President (2001-2006). Chief Compliance Officer of certain funds in  
   
the Fund Complex.  
Mark E. Mathiasen  
Since 2011  
Director; Associate General Counsel of Guggenheim Funds Services, LLC (2007-present). Secretary of certain funds  
Year of Birth: 1978  
 
in the Fund Complex.  
Secretary  
   
 
*      
Address for all Officers: 2455 Corporate West Drive, Lisle, IL 60532
**      
Officers serve at the pleasure of the Board of Trustees and until his or her successor is appointed and qualified or until his or her earlier resignation or removal.
***      
Effective February 12, 2013.
 
 
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DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN (Unaudited)
  June 30, 2013

 
Unless the registered owner of common shares elects to receive cash by contacting the Plan Administrator, all dividends declared on common shares of the Fund will be automatically reinvested by Computershare Shareowner Services LLC (the “Plan Administrator”), Administrator for shareholders in the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”), in additional common shares of the Fund. Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary and may be terminated or resumed at any time without penalty by notice if received and processed by the Plan Administrator prior to the dividend record date; otherwise such termination or resumption will be effective with respect to any subsequently declared dividend or other distribution. Some brokers may automatically elect to receive cash on your behalf and may re-invest that cash in additional common shares of the Fund for you. If you wish for all dividends declared on your common shares of the Fund to be automatically reinvested pursuant to the Plan, please contact your broker.
 
The Plan Administrator will open an account for each common shareholder under the Plan in the same name in which such common shareholder’s common shares are registered. Whenever the Fund declares a dividend or other distribution (together, a “Dividend”) payable in cash, non-participants in the Plan will receive cash and participants in the Plan will receive the equivalent in common shares. The common shares will be acquired by the Plan Administrator for the participants’ accounts, depending upon the circumstances described below, either (i) through receipt of additional unissued but authorized common shares from the Fund (“Newly Issued Common Shares”) or (ii) by purchase of outstanding common shares on the open market (“Open-Market Purchases”) on the New York Stock Exchange or elsewhere. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the closing market price plus estimated brokerage commission per common share is equal to or greater than the net asset value per common share, the Plan Administrator will invest the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares on behalf of the participants. The number of Newly Issued Common Shares to be credited to each participant’s account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the Dividend by the net asset value per common share on the payment date; provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the closing market value on the payment date, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the closing market price per common share on the payment date. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the net asset value per common share is greater than the closing market value plus estimated brokerage commission, the Plan Administrator will invest the Dividend amount in common shares acquired on behalf of the participants in Open-Market Purchases.
 
If, before the Plan Administrator has completed its Open-Market Purchases, the market price per common share exceeds the net asset value per common share, the average per common share purchase price paid by the Plan Administrator may exceed the net asset value of the common shares, resulting in the acquisition of fewer common shares than if the Dividend had been paid in Newly Issued Common Shares on the Dividend payment date. Because of the foregoing difficulty with respect to Open-Market Purchases, the Plan provides that if the Plan Administrator is unable to invest the full Dividend amount in Open-Market Purchases during the purchase period or if the market discount shifts to a market premium during the purchase period, the Plan Administrator may cease making Open-Market Purchases and may invest the uninvested portion of the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares at net asset value per common share at the close of business on the Last Purchase Date provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the then current market price per common share; the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price on the payment date.
 
The Plan Administrator maintains all shareholders’ accounts in the Plan and furnishes written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information needed by shareholders for tax records. Common shares in the account of each Plan participant will be held by the Plan Administrator on behalf of the Plan participant, and each shareholder proxy will include those shares purchased or received pursuant to the Plan. The Plan Administrator will forward all proxy solicitation materials to participants and vote proxies for shares held under the Plan in accordance with the instruction of the participants.
 
There will be no brokerage charges with respect to common shares issued directly by the Fund. However, each participant will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commission incurred in connection with Open-Market Purchases. The automatic reinvestment of Dividends will not relieve participants of any Federal, state or local income tax that may be payable (or required to be withheld) on such Dividends.
 
The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan. There is no direct service charge to participants with regard to purchases in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants.
 
All correspondence or questions concerning the Plan should be directed to the Plan Administrator, Computershare Shareowners Services, LLC, P.O. Box 358015, Pittsburgh, PA 15252-8015; Attention: Shareholder Services Department, Phone Number: (866) 488-3559.
 
 
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CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENTS CONTRACT RE-APPROVAL
 
  June 30, 2013

Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund (the “Fund”) was organized as a Delaware statutory trust on July 11, 2011 and is registered as a diversified, closed-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC (“GFIA” or the “Adviser”), an affiliate of Guggenheim Partners, LLC (“Guggenheim Partners” and referred to herein collectively with its subsidiaries and affiliates as “Guggenheim”), a diversified financial services firm, serves as the Fund’s investment adviser and provides certain administrative and other services pursuant to an investment advisory agreement between the Fund and GFIA (the “Investment Advisory Agreement”). Under the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreement, GFIA also is responsible for overseeing the activities of: (i) Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC (“GPIM” or the “Options Strategy Sub-Adviser”), an indirect subsidiary of Guggenheim Partners, which serves as the Fund’s investment sub-adviser responsible for managing the Fund’s options strategy pursuant to an investment sub-advisory agreement by and among the Fund, the Adviser and GPIM (the “GPIM Sub-Advisory Agreement”); and (ii) Security Investors, LLC (“Security Investors” or the “Equity Portfolio Sub-Adviser” and together with GPIM, the “Sub-Advisers” and each, a “Sub-Adviser”) which serves as the Fund’s investment sub-adviser responsible for managing the Fund’s portfolio of equity securities pursuant to an investment sub-advisory agreement by and among the Fund, GFIA and Security Investors (the “Security Investors Sub-Advisory Agreement” and together with the GPIM Sub-Advisory Agreement, the “Sub-Advisory Agreements” and each, a “Sub-Advisory Agreement”). (The Sub-Advisory Agreements and the Investment Advisory Agreement are referred to herein collectively as, the “Advisory Agreements.”) Under the supervision of the Fund’s Board of Trustees (the “Board” and the members of the Board individually, the “Trustees”) and GFIA, Security Investors manages the equity portfolio of the Fund in accordance with its stated investment objective and policies, makes investment decisions for the Fund and places orders to purchase and sell securities on the Fund’s behalf, while GPIM implements the Fund’s options strategy and provides certain facilities and personnel related to such management. Security Investors is an affiliate of Guggenheim Partners.
 
At meetings held in person on April 18, 2013 (the “April Meeting”) and on May 14, 2013 (the “May Meeting”), the Contracts Review Committee of the Board (the “Committee”), consisting solely of those Trustees who are not “interested persons,” as defined by the 1940 Act, of the Fund (the “Independent Trustees”), met independently of Fund management to consider the renewal of the Advisory Agreements. As part of its review process, the Committee was represented by independent legal counsel to the Independent Trustees (“Independent Legal Counsel”). Independent Legal Counsel reviewed with the Committee various factors relevant to the consideration of advisory agreements and the legal responsibilities of the Trustees related to such consideration. The Committee took into account various materials received from the Adviser, the Sub-Advisers and Independent Legal Counsel. The Committee also considered the variety of written materials, reports and oral presentations it received (and received by the full Board) throughout the year regarding performance and operating results of the Fund.
 
In connection with the contract review process, Guggenheim engaged FUSE Research Network LLC (“FUSE”), an independent, third party research provider, to prepare advisory contract renewal reports for various boards of directors/trustees in the Guggenheim fund complex, designed specifically to help the boards of directors/trustees fulfill their advisory contract renewal responsibilities. The objective of the reports is to present the subject funds’ relative position regarding fees, expenses and total return performance, with peer group and universe comparisons. Guggenheim management determined to engage FUSE for this purpose in connection with other initiatives designed to improve efficiencies and implement a uniform, streamlined and enhanced 15(c) reporting process across its various product lines. Further to this end, Guggenheim management had multiple discussions with, and sought input from, Independent Legal Counsel, the Committee Chair and the Board Chair, in preparing a comprehensive presentation and delivery of information in connection with the contract review process. In addition, the Adviser, on behalf of itself and GFIA, provided information in response to requests for certain additional information following the April Meeting.
 
Among other things, the Adviser and Sub-Advisers provided organizational presentations, staffing reports and biographies of those key personnel of the Adviser and Sub-Advisers providing services to the Fund to assist the Committee in assessing the nature and quality of services provided by the Adviser and Sub-Advisers, information comparing the investment performance, advisory fees and total expenses of the Fund to other funds (including such information presented in the FUSE reports as well as supplemental information prepared by management), information about the profitability of the Adviser and Security Investors in connection with the Advisory Agreements and information about the compliance and risk management programs of the Adviser and the Sub-Advisers.
 
Following an analysis and discussion of the factors identified below, the Committee concluded that it was in the best interests of the Fund to recommend that the Board approve the renewal of all of the Advisory Agreements for an additional 12-month term (the “Renewal Term”).
 
Investment Advisory Agreement
Nature, Extent and Quality of Services Provided by the Adviser: With respect to the nature, extent and quality of services currently provided by the Adviser, the Committee noted that the Adviser had delegated responsibility for the investment and reinvestment of the Fund’s assets to the Sub-Advisers. The Committee considered the Adviser’s responsibility to oversee the Sub-Advisers and that the Adviser has similar oversight responsibilities for other registered investment companies for which GFIA serves as investment adviser (collectively, “Guggenheim Funds”). In this connection, the Committee took into account information provided by management describing the Adviser’s processes and activities for providing oversight of the Sub-Advisers’ investment strategies and compliance with investment restrictions, as well as information regarding the Adviser’s Sub-Advisory Oversight Committee. The Committee also
 
 
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CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENTS CONTRACT RE-APPROVAL continued
 
June 30, 2013

considered the secondary market support services provided by the Adviser to the Fund. In addition, the Committee noted its various discussions with management concerning the experience and qualifications of the Adviser’s personnel, including those personnel providing compliance oversight. The Independent Trustees also took into account the various legal, compliance and risk management oversight and staffing initiatives undertaken by management, including, among other things, enhancements to risk management processes and restructuring of the legal and compliance departments in 2012, which management stated was designed to create a cohesive legal and compliance program with increased collaboration among compliance and legal professionals and with other departments across the Guggenheim organization. The Committee also considered management’s other initiatives intended to achieve greater enhancements and efficiencies in Guggenheim’s ability to provide services to the Guggenheim Funds (including the Fund), such as efforts to streamline and simplify the organizational structure of Guggenheim’s advisory business, as reflected by internal reorganizations of various management entities. Moreover, in connection with the Committee’s evaluation of the overall package of services provided by GFIA, the Committee considered the quality of the administrative services provided by GFIA and proposed to be provided during the Renewal Term by GFIA’s affiliate, Rydex Fund Services, LLC (“RFS”), utilizing the same Guggenheim personnel previously responsible for fund administration.
 
Further with respect to the Adviser’s resources and its ability to carry out its responsibilities under the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Committee considered its review of financial information concerning the Adviser, as well as its discussions with the Chief Financial Officer of GFIA.
 
The Committee also considered the acceptability of the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreement (including the relatively broad scope of services required to be performed by GFIA). Based on the foregoing, and based on other information received (both oral and written) at the April Meeting and at the May Meeting, as well as other considerations, the Committee concluded that the Adviser and its personnel were qualified to serve the Fund in such capacity.
 
Investment Performance: The Committee considered the Fund’s investment performance by reviewing the Fund’s total return on a net asset value (“NAV”) and market price basis for the one-year period ended December 31, 2012, noting the Fund’s relatively brief operating period since its inception in 2011. The Committee compared the Fund’s performance to the performance of a peer group of closed-end funds determined by the Adviser (the “peer group of funds”) for the same time periods. The Committee noted that the Adviser’s peer group selection methodology for the Fund starts with the entire U.S.-listed taxable closed-end fund universe, and excludes funds that, among other things, under normal market conditions, are less than 80% covered with options, are less than 80% domestic, primarily write options on individual equities or are sector-oriented. Consequently, the peer group of funds included other closed-end funds that generally invest a majority of their assets in equity securities with a similar covered call strategy. In assessing the peer group constituents and both the comparative performance and fee data presented (including in the FUSE reports), the Committee considered management’s discussion of the challenges of developing a relevant peer group for the Fund, in that the enhanced equity strategy implemented by GPIM for the Fund is not similarly replicated by any other non-Guggenheim managed closed-end fund.
 
The Committee noted that the Fund’s investment results were consistent with the Fund’s investment objective of seeking to provide a high level of risk-adjusted total return with an emphasis on current income. The Committee also considered that the Adviser does not directly manage the investment portfolio and implement the Fund’s investment strategies but had delegated such duties to the Equity Portfolio Sub-Adviser and the Options Strategy Sub-Adviser. The Committee also considered the Fund’s use of leverage, the cost of the leverage as of December 31, 2012, and information received at quarterly Board meetings regarding the impact of leverage. Based on the information provided, the Committee concluded that the Adviser had appropriately reviewed and monitored each Sub-Adviser’s investment performance.
 
Comparative Fees, Costs of Services Provided and the Profits Realized by the Adviser from its Relationship with the Fund: The Committee compared the Fund’s advisory fee (which includes the sub-advisory fees paid to the Sub-Advisers) and expense ratio to the peer group of funds. The Committee also reviewed the mean and median advisory fees and expense ratios of the peer group of funds. The Committee noted that while the Fund’s expense ratio was above the median expense ratio of the peer group of funds, none of the other funds within the peer group of funds employ leverage. In addition, the Committee noted the Fund’s relatively small size as compared to other funds in the peer group of funds and the impact of the size differential on the expense ratio related to fixed expenses. The Committee also took into account management’s view that because four of the Fund’s six peer funds are managed by the same asset management firm, with sizable closed-end fund assets under management, such asset management firm has been able to implement a unique fee pricing structure. The Committee also considered the complexity of the investment strategies employed by the Sub-Advisers and information provided by management comparing the Fund’s contractual advisory fee to the average advisory fee of the broader Morningstar covered call universe. The Committee also considered management’s explanation regarding the appropriateness of the Fund’s advisory fees as compared to Guggenheim Enhanced Equity Strategy Fund (“GGE”) and Guggenheim Enhanced Equity Income Fund (“GPM”), noting the investment strategy differences of the Fund as compared to GGE and GPM and that the decision to implement fee waivers for each of GPM and GGE was the result of a unique set of circumstances, which included the replacement of both unaffiliated investment sub-advisers with GPIM and changes in investment strategy.
 
With respect to the costs of services provided and profits realized by the Adviser from its relationship with the Fund, the Committee reviewed information regarding the revenues the Adviser received under the Investment Advisory Agreement as well as the estimated allocated direct
 
 
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CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENTS CONTRACT RE-APPROVAL continued
 
  June 30, 2013


 
and indirect costs the Adviser incurred in providing services to the Fund, including paying the sub-advisory fees to the Sub-Advisers.
 
The Committee considered other benefits available to the Adviser because of its relationship with the Fund and noted that the Adviser may be deemed to benefit from arrangements whereby its affiliates RFS and the Sub-Advisers, respectively, will receive administrative services fees from serving as administrator and receive sub-advisory fees for managing the investment portfolio. The Committee also noted the Adviser’s statement that it may benefit from marketing synergies arising from offering a broad spectrum of products, including the Fund. Based on all of the information provided, the Committee determined that the Adviser’s profitability from its relationship with the Fund was not unreasonable.
 
Economies of Scale to be Realized: The Committee noted that the advisory fee schedule does not contain breakpoints that reduce the fee rate on assets above specified levels. The Committee further noted that due to the Fund’s closed-end structure, new shares are not continuously offered. As a result, the Committee concluded that breakpoints were not warranted at this time.
 
Sub-Advisory Agreements
Nature, Extent and Quality of Services Provided by the Sub-Advisers: With respect to the nature, extent and quality of services provided by the Sub-Advisers, the Committee considered the qualifications, experience and skills of the Sub-Advisers’ portfolio management and other key personnel and information from the Sub-Advisers describing the scope of their services to the Fund. The Committee considered the Sub-Advisers’ resources and their ability to carry out their responsibilities under the Sub-Advisory Agreements, and the Committee reviewed the balance sheet and income statement of each Sub-Adviser.
 
The Committee also considered the acceptability of the terms of each Sub-Advisory Agreement. In addition, the Committee considered the Sub-Advisers’ efforts in pursuing the Fund’s investment objective of seeking to provide a high level of risk-adjusted total return with an emphasis on current income. Based on the foregoing, and based on other information received (both oral and written) at the April Meeting and at the May Meeting, the Committee concluded that each Sub-Adviser was qualified to provide the services under its respective Sub-Advisory Agreement.
 
Investment Performance: The Committee reviewed the performance of the Fund and the peer group of funds over different periods of time. The Committee observed that the Fund underperformed the average return of its peer group of funds for the one-year period ended December 31, 2012, on both a NAV and market price basis. The Committee took into account management’s explanation that the Fund’s strategy was hampered in 2012 by a market environment which generated two significant corrections, a 9.6% decline in the spring and a 7.3% decline in the fall, but wherein implied volatility generally was below historic averages, providing less of a cushion for these corrections. Also, the Committee considered, as noted, that the other funds in the peer group of funds do not employ leverage and thus, during the spring and fall market declines the Fund’s leverage caused it to experience a greater decline than the peer group’s decline. In this connection, the Committee noted management’s belief that leverage may enable the Fund to outperform the peer group during market advances, creating the potential for long-term outperformance. In addition, the Committee observed that the Fund’s performance on a NAV basis exceeded the return of the CBOE BuyWrite Index for the one-year period ended December 31, 2012, while lagging the return of the S&P 500 over the same period. The Committee also considered that the Fund’s limited time period during which it has operated introduces the possibility of greater market volatility and performance discrepancies and, therefore, the Sub-Advisers should be evaluated over a longer period and full market cycle.
 
The Committee also evaluated Fund information provided by management concerning the Fund’s price movement, premium/discount data, sector allocation and history, peer group overview and detailed performance analysis.
 
In light of all of the foregoing, the Committee determined that the Fund’s performance was acceptable.
 
Comparative Fees, Costs of Services Provided and the Profits Realized by each Sub-Adviser from its Relationship with the Fund: The Committee reviewed the level of sub-advisory fees payable to each of GPIM and Security Investors, noting that the fees would be paid by GFIA and do not impact the fees paid by the Fund. The Committee also reviewed the dollar amount of sub-advisory fees paid to each of GPIM and Security Investors for the twelve months ended December 31, 2012. The Committee compared the sub-advisory fee paid by the Adviser to each Sub-Adviser to the fees charged by the Sub-Adviser to other clients including other registered investment companies.
 
Economies of Scale to be Realized: The Committee recognized that, because the Sub-Advisers’ fees would be paid by the Adviser and not the Fund, the analysis of economies of scale was more appropriate in the context of the Committee’s consideration of the Investment Advisory Agreement, which was separately considered. (See “Investment Advisory Agreement – Economies of Scale to be Realized” above.)
 
Overall Conclusions
Based on the foregoing, the Committee determined at the May Meeting that the investment advisory fees are fair and reasonable in light of the extent and quality of the services provided and other benefits received and that the continuation of each Advisory Agreement is in the best interests of the Fund. In reaching this conclusion, no single factor was determinative. At the May Meeting, the Committee, constituting all of the Independent Trustees, recommended the renewal of each Advisory Agreement for an additional annual term. Further, at its May 14, 2013, meeting, upon the recommendation of the Committee, the Board, including all of the Independent Trustees, approved the renewal of each Advisory Agreement for an additional annual term.
 
 
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FUND INFORMATION
  June 30, 2013

     
Board of Trustees  
Executive Officers  
Investment Adviser  
Randall C. Barnes  
Donald C. Cacciapaglia  
Guggenheim Funds Investment  
 
Chief Executive Officer  
Advisors, LLC  
Donald C. Cacciapaglia*  
 
Lisle, Illinois  
 
Amy J. Lee  
 
Roman Friedrich III  
Chief Legal Officer  
Options Strategy Investment  
   
Sub-Adviser  
Robert B. Karn III  
John L. Sullivan  
Guggenheim Partners  
 
Chief Financial Officer, Chief  
Investment Management, LLC  
Ronald A. Nyberg  
Accounting Officer, and Treasurer
Santa Monica, California  
 
Ronald E. Toupin, Jr.,  
Joanna M. Catalucci  
Equity Strategy Investment  
Chairperson  
Chief Compliance Officer  
Sub-Adviser  
   
Security Investors, LLC  
* Trustee is an “interested person”  
Mark E. Mathiasen  
New York, New York  
(as defined in section 2(a)(19)  
Secretary  
 
of the 1940 Act) (“Interested  
 
Administrator  
Trustee”) of the Trust because  
 
Rydex Fund Services, LLC  
of his position as the President  
 
Rockville, Maryland  
and CEO of the Adviser.  
   
   
Accounting Agent and Custodian  
   
The Bank of New York Mellon  
   
New York, New York  
 
   
Legal Counsel  
   
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &  
   
Flom LLP  
   
New York, New York  
 
   
Independent Registered  
   
Public Accounting Firm  
   
Ernst & Young LLP  
   
Chicago, Illinois  
 
 
Privacy Principles of the Fund
The Fund is committed to maintaining the privacy of its shareholders and to safeguarding their non-public personal information. The following information is provided to help you understand what personal information the Fund collects, how the Fund protects that information and why, in certain cases, the Fund may share information with select other parties.
 
Generally, the Fund does not receive any non-public personal information relating to its shareholders, although certain non-public personal information of its shareholders may become available to the Fund. The Fund does not disclose any non-public personal information about its shareholders or former shareholders to anyone, except as permitted by law or as is necessary in order to service shareholder accounts (for example, to a transfer agent or third party administrator).
 
The Fund restricts access to non-public personal information about its shareholders to employees of the Fund’s investment advisor and its affiliates with a legitimate business need for the information. The Fund maintains physical, electronic and procedural safeguards designed to protect the non-public personal information of its shareholders.
 
Questions concerning your shares of Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund?
·   
If your shares are held in a Brokerage Account, contact your Broker.
·   
If you have physical possession of your shares in certificate form, contact the Fund’s Transfer Agent:
 
Computershare Shareowner Services LLC, 480 Washington Blvd., Jersey City, NJ 07310; (866) 488-3559.
 
This report is sent to shareholders of Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund for their information. It is not a Prospectus, circular or representation intended for use in the purchase or sale of shares of the Fund or of any securities mentioned in this report.
 
A description of the Fund’s proxy voting policies and procedures related to portfolio securities is available without charge, upon request, by calling the Fund at (866)274-2227.
 
Information regarding how the Fund voted proxies for portfolio securities, if applicable, during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30, is also available, without charge and upon request by calling (866)274-2227, by visiting the Fund’s website at www.guggenheiminvestments.com/geq or by accessing the Fund’s Form N-PX on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) website at www.sec.gov.
 
The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Fund’s Form N-Q is available on the SEC website at www.sec.gov or by visiting the Fund’s website at www.guggenheiminvestments.com/geq. The Fund’s Form N-Q may also be viewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC; information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330 or at www.sec.gov.
 
Notice to Shareholders
Notice is hereby give in accordance with Section 23(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, that the Fund from time to time may purchase shares of its common stock in the open market.
 
 
GEQ  | GUGGENHEIM EQUAL WEIGHT ENHANCED EQUITY INCOME FUND SEMIANNUAL REPORT | 31
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
ABOUT THE FUND MANAGER

 
Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC
Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC (“GPIM”) is an indirect subsidiary of Guggenheim Partners, LLC, a diversified financial services firm. The firm provides capital markets services, portfolio and risk management expertise, wealth management, and investment advisory services. Clients of Guggenheim Partners, LLC subsidiaries are an elite mix of individuals, family offices, endowments, foundations, insurance companies and other institutions.
 
Investment Philosophy
GPIM’s investment philosophy is predicated upon the belief that thorough research and independent thought are rewarded with performance that has the potential to outperform benchmark indexes with both lower volatility and lower correlation of returns over time as compared to such benchmark indexes.
 
Investment Process
GPIM’s investment process is a collaborative effort between various groups including the Portfolio Construction Group, which utilize proprietary portfolio construction and risk modeling tools to determine allocation of assets among a variety of sectors, and its Sector Specialists, who are responsible for security selection within these sectors and for implementing securities transactions, including the structuring of certain securities directly with the issuers or with investment banks and dealers involved in the origination of such securities.
 
Security Investors, LLC
Security Investors, LLC (“SI”) is a registered investment adviser. For more than 20 years, SI has been dedicated to helping investors and financial professionals navigate diverse market conditions with confidence. With approximately $20 billion in assets, SI offers institutional investors and financial intermediaries a range of four investment competencies for building well-diversified portfolios; Alternative Assets and Strategies; Fundamental Active Alpha Strategies (Equity and Fixed-Income); Target Beta Strategies; and Exchange Traded products (ETFs).
 
     
Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC  
   
2455 Corporate West Drive  
   
Lisle, IL 60532  
   
Member FINRA/SIPC (08/13)  
 
CEF -GEQ -SAR -0613  
NOT FDIC-INSURED l NOT BANK-GUARANTEED l MAY LOSE VALUE
 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
Item 2. Code of Ethics.
 
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.
 
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.
 
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.
 
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
Item 6. Schedule of Investments.
 
The Schedule of Investments is included as part of Item 1.
 
Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies.
 
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies.
 
(a)
Not applicable for a semi-annual reporting period.
 
(b)
There has been no change, as of the date of this filing, in the Portfolio Manager identified in response to paragraph (a)(1) of this Item in the registrant’s most recent annual report on Form N-CSR.

Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.
 
None.
 
Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.
 
The registrant has not made any material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the registrant’s Board of Trustees.
 
 
 
 

 
 
Item 11. Controls and Procedures.
 
(a) The registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have evaluated the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act) as of a date within 90 days of this filing and have concluded based on such evaluation, as required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the Investment Company Act, that the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures were effective, as of that date, in ensuring that information required to be disclosed by the registrant in this Form N-CSR was recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms.
 
(b) There were no changes in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act) that occurred during the registrant’s second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
 
Item 12. Exhibits.
 
(a)(1)    Not applicable.
 
(a)(2)    Certifications of principal executive officer and principal financial officer pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act.
 
(a)(3)     Not applicable.
 
(b)         Certifications of principal executive officer and principal financial officer pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) of the Investment Company Act and Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
 
(Registrant) Guggenheim Equal Weight Enhanced Equity Income Fund
 
By:           /s/ Donald C. Cacciapaglia               
 
Name:      Donald C. Cacciapaglia
 
Title:        Chief Executive Officer
 
Date:        September 4, 2013
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
 
By:           /s/ Donald C. Cacciapaglia               
 
Name:     Donald C. Cacciapaglia
 
Title:       Chief Executive Officer
 
Date:        September 4, 2013
 
By:           /s/ John L. Sullivan                            
 
Name:     John L. Sullivan
 
Title:       Chief Financial Officer, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer
 
Date:        September 4, 2013
 


 
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