AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON JANUARY 8, 2020

                                                          1933 ACT FILE NO. 333-
                                                   1940 ACT FILE NO. 811 - 03763

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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                            _______________________

                           REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON
                                    FORM S-6
                            ________________________

              FOR REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OF
                      SECURITIES OF UNIT INVESTMENT TRUSTS

                           REGISTERED ON FORM N-8B-2

     A.   EXACT NAME OF TRUST: GUGGENHEIM DEFINED PORTFOLIOS, SERIES 1989

     B.   NAME OF DEPOSITOR: GUGGENHEIM FUNDS DISTRIBUTORS, LLC

     C.   COMPLETE ADDRESS OF DEPOSITOR'S PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES:

                       Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC
                                227 West Monroe
                            Chicago, Illinois 60606

     D.   NAME AND COMPLETE ADDRESS OF AGENT FOR SERVICE:

     Copies to:

    AMY LEE, ESQ.                                      ERIC F. FESS, ESQ.
    Vice President and Secretary                       Chapman and Cutler LLP
    Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC                 111 West Monroe Street
    227 West Monroe                                    Chicago, Illinois 60603
    Chicago, Illinois  60606                           (312) 845-3000
    (630) 505-3700


It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)

[_]  immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)

[_]  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)

[_]  60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)

[_]  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of rule 485

[_]  This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
     previously filed post-effective amendment.

E.   TITLE OF SECURITIES BEING REGISTERED: Units of fractional undivided
     beneficial interest.

F.   APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED SALE TO PUBLIC: As soon as practicable after
     the effective date of the Registration Statement.

[_]  Check box if it is proposed that this filing will become effective on
     (date) at (time) pursuant to Rule 487.

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The registration hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or dates
as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the registrant shall file
a further amendment which specifically states that this Registration Statement
shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the
Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration Statement shall become
effective on such date as the Commission, acting pursuant to said Section 8(a)
may determine.


The information in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. We may
not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus is not an
offer to sell these securities and is not soliciting an offer to buy these
securities in any state where the offer or sale is not permitted.


      Preliminary Prospectus Dated January 8, 2020, Subject to Completion

                   Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989

                       Total Income Portfolio, Series 20


                                GUGGENHEIM LOGO


                   PROSPECTUS PART A DATED ____________, 2020

                 A portfolio containing securities selected by
 Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC with the assistance of Guggenheim Partners
                           Investment Management, LLC

           An investment can be made in the underlying funds directly
  rather than through the trust. These direct investments can be made without
  paying the sales charge, operating expenses and organizational costs of the
                                     trust.

           The Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or
disapproved of these securities or passed upon the adequacy or accuracy of this
     prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

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INVESTMENT SUMMARY

     Use this Investment Summary to help you decide whether an investment in
this trust is right for you. More detailed information can be found later in
this prospectus.

                                    Overview

     Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989 is a unit investment trust that
consists of the Total Income Portfolio, Series 20 (the "trust"). Guggenheim
Funds Distributors, LLC ("Guggenheim Funds" or the "sponsor") serves as the
sponsor of the trust.

     The trust is scheduled to terminate in approximately 15 months.

                              Investment Objective

     The trust seeks to provide current income and, as a secondary objective,
the potential for capital appreciation.

                         Principal Investment Strategy

     The trust seeks to provide current income with the potential for capital
appreciation by investing in a diversified portfolio of dividend-paying stocks
of U.S. and international companies, shares of exchange-traded funds ("ETFs")
that invest in fixed-income securities, shares of closed-end funds that have
elected to be treated as business development companies under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended ("BDCs"), shares of master limited partnerships
("MLPs"), shares of U.S. and international real estate investment trusts
("REITs") and shares of ETFs that invest in REITs. The international securities
that the trust may invest in may be issued by companies located in emerging
markets. The sponsor, with the assistance of Guggenheim Partners Investment
Management, LLC ("GPIM"), an affiliate of Guggenheim Partners, LLC, has selected
the securities to be included in the trust's portfolio.

                               Security Selection

     The trust's portfolio is divided into three different asset segments:

     1)   Equity Securities: common stocks of domestic and international
          companies;

     2)   Fixed Income ETFs: shares of ETFs that invest in fixed-income
          securities; and

     3)   Alternative Income Securities: shares of BDCs, MLPs, U.S. and
          international REITs and ETFs that invest in REITs.

     The selection methodology for each segment is described below.

                           Equity Securities Segment

     The trust may invest in the common stocks of small-, mid- and
large-capitalization companies. In constructing the trust's portfolio, the
sponsor selects domestic and international companies, which may include
securities of issuers located in emerging markets, American Depositary Receipts
("ADRs"), Global Depositary Receipts ("GDRs") and New York Registry Shares,
based on, but not limited to, the following factors:

     o    Liquidity;

     o    Fundamental characteristics such as return on assets, earnings before
          interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization and year-over-year
          sales growth; and

     o    Dividend yield.

                           Fixed Income ETFs Segment

     The sponsor selects ETFs that invest in fixed income securities such as
corporate bonds, floating rate securities, international and emerging market
debt, preferred securities and high-yield or "junk" securities. The ETFs are
selected based on, but not limited to, the following factors:

     o    Liquidity;

     o    Yield; and

     o    Duration.

     The sponsor will consider ETFs investing in securities of all durations.
The duration of a security is a measure of its price sensitivity to changes in
interest rates based on the weighted average term to maturity of its interest
and principal cash flows.

     ETFs are investment pools that hold securities. ETFs provide an efficient
and relatively simple way to invest in that they offer investors the
opportunity to buy and sell an entire basket of securities with a single
transaction throughout the trading day. ETFs are often built as an index fund,
but trade like a stock on an exchange. ETFs generally offer advantages similar
to those found in index funds such as low operating costs, performance designed
to track an index, the potential for high tax efficiency and consistent
investment strategies. Unlike conventional mutual funds, ETFs normally issue
and redeem shares on a continuous basis at their net asset value in large
specified blocks of shares, known as "creation units." Market makers, large
investors and institutions deal in creation units. The trust will buy shares of
the ETF on the exchanges and will incur brokerage costs.

                     Alternative Income Securities Segment

     The sponsor selects BDCs, MLPs, U.S. and international REITs and ETFs that
invest in REITs based on, but not limited to, the following factors:

     o    Liquidity; and

     o    Dividend yield.

     The BDCs held by the trust will be publicly traded and may hold equity or
fixed-income securities issued by domestic or foreign companies. These
securities may include the securities of small-, mid- or large-capitalization
companies. In addition, the securities held by the BDCs included in the trust
may be rated investment-grade or non-investment-grade. High-yield or "junk"
bonds, the generic names for bonds rated below investment-grade, are frequently
issued by corporations in the growth stage of their development or by
established companies that are highly leveraged or whose operations or
industries are depressed. Obligations rated below investment-grade should be
considered speculative.

                 Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC

     Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC is a subsidiary of
Guggenheim Partners, LLC and an affiliate of the sponsor, which offers financial
services expertise within its asset management, investment advisory, capital
markets, institutional finance and merchant banking business lines. Clients
consist of a mix of individuals, family offices, endowments, foundations,
insurance companies, pension plans and other institutions that together have
entrusted the firm with supervision of more than $100 billion in assets. A
global diversified financial services firm, Guggenheim Partners, LLC office
locations include New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Boston, Philadelphia,
St. Louis, Houston, London, Dublin, Geneva, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mumbai and
Dubai.

     The sponsor is also a subsidiary of Guggenheim Partners, LLC. See "General
Information" for additional information.

                                 Future Trusts

     The sponsor may create future trusts that follow the same general
investment strategy. One such trust is expected to be available approximately
three months after the trust's initial date of deposit (the "Inception Date")
and upon the trust's termination. Each trust is designed to be part of a longer
term strategy.

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             Essential Information
           (as of the Inception Date)

Inception Date                  ____________, 2020

Unit Price                                  $10.00

Termination Date                ____________, 2021

Distribution Date           25th day of each month
              (commencing ______ 25, 2020, if any)

Record Date                 15th day of each month
              (commencing ______ 15, 2020, if any)

CUSIP Numbers

Cash Distributions
Standard Accounts
Fee Account Cash

Reinvested Distributions
Standard Accounts
Fee Account Reinvest
Ticker                                      CTIPTX

            Portfolio Diversification

                                       Approximate
Security Type                 Portfolio Percentage
-------------------           --------------------

                                            ------
                                                  %
                                            ======
Sector
(excludes Exchange-                    Approximate
Traded Funds)                 Portfolio Percentage
-------------------           --------------------

                                            ------
Total                                             %
                                            ======

Country/Territory
(Headquartered)
(excludes Exchange-                    Approximate
Traded Funds)                 Portfolio Percentage
-------------------           --------------------

                                            ------
Total                                             %
                                            ======

Market
Capitalization
(excludes Exchange-                    Approximate
Traded Funds)                 Portfolio Percentage
-------------------           --------------------

                                            ------
Total                                             %
                                            ======
Minimum Investment
All accounts                                1 unit
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                Principal Risks

     As with all investments, you may lose some or all of your investment in
the trust. No assurance can be given that the trust's investment objective will
be achieved. The trust also might not perform as well as you expect. This can
happen for reasons such as these:

     o    Securities prices can be volatile. The value of your investment may
          fall over time. Market value fluctuates in response to various
          factors. These can include stock market movements, purchases or sales
          of securities by the trust, government policies, litigation, and
          changes in interest rates, inflation, the financial condition of the
          securities' issuer or even perceptions of the issuer. Units of the
          trust are not deposits of any bank and are not insured or guaranteed
          by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government
          agency.

     o    Share prices, dividend rates or distributions on the securities in the
          trust may decline during the life of the trust. There is no guarantee
          that share prices of the securities in the trust will not decline and
          that the issuers of the securities will declare dividends or
          distributions in the future and, if declared, whether they will remain
          at current levels or increase over time.

     o    The trust invests in shares of ETFs. ETFs are investment pools that
          hold other securities. The ETFs are often passively-managed index
          funds that seek to replicate the performance or composition of a
          recognized securities index. ETFs are subject to various risks,
          including management's ability to meet the fund's investment
          objective. Shares of ETFs may trade at a discount from their net asset
          value in the secondary market. This risk is separate and distinct from
          the risk that the net asset value of the ETF shares may decrease. The
          amount of such discount from net asset value is subject to change from
          time to time in response to various factors. The underlying ETF has
          management and operating expenses. Consequently, you will bear not
          only your share of your trust's expenses, but also the expenses of the
          underlying ETFs. By investing in ETFs, the trust incurs greater
          expenses than you would incur if you invested directly in the ETFs.

     o    The trust is subject to an ETF's index correlation risk. To the extent
          that an underlying ETF is an index tracking ETF, index correlation
          risk is the risk that the performance of an ETF will vary from the
          actual performance of the fund's target index, known as "tracking
          error." This can happen due to fund expenses, transaction costs,
          market impact, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs) and
          timing variances.

     o    The trust invests in shares of BDCs. BDCs' ability to grow and their
          overall financial condition is impacted significantly by their ability
          to raise capital. In addition to raising capital through the issuance
          of common stock, BDCs may engage in borrowing. A BDC's credit rating
          may change over time which could adversely affect their ability to
          obtain additional credit and/or increase the cost of such borrowing.
          BDCs are generally leveraged, which may magnify the potential for
          gains and losses on amounts invested and, accordingly, may increase
          the risks associated with those securities.

          BDC investments are frequently not publicly traded and, as a result,
          there is uncertainty as to the value and liquidity of those
          investments. Due to the relative illiquidity of certain BDC
          investments, if a BDC is required to liquidate all or a portion of its
          portfolio quickly, it may realize significantly less than the value at
          which such investments are recorded.

          BDCs frequently have high expenses which may include, but are not
          limited to, the payment of management fees, administration expenses,
          taxes, interest payable on debt, governmental charges, independent
          director fees and expenses, valuation expenses, and fees payable to
          third parties relating to or associated with making investments. In
          addition, a BDC may pay an incentive fee to its investment adviser.
          The potential for the investment adviser to earn incentive fees may
          create an incentive for the investment adviser to make investments
          that are riskier or more speculative than would otherwise be in the
          best interests of the BDC. Additionally, if the base management fee is
          based on gross assets, the investment adviser may have an incentive to
          increase portfolio leverage in order to earn higher base management
          fees. These incentives raise the expenses paid by a BDC. The trust
          will indirectly bear these expenses and estimated BDC expenses are
          shown in the trust's annual operating expenses under "Fees and
          Expenses" to illustrate the impact of their impact. These expenses may
          fluctuate significantly over time.

     o    The ETFs and BDCs are subject to annual fees and expenses, including a
          management fee. Unitholders of the trust will bear these fees in
          addition to the fees and expenses of the trust. See "Fees and
          Expenses" for additional information.

     o    The value of the fixed-income securities in the BDCs and ETFs will
          generally fall if interest rates, in general, rise. Typically,
          fixed-income securities with longer periods before maturity are more
          sensitive to interest rate changes. In addition, the duration of a
          security will also affect its price sensitivity to interest rate
          changes. For example, if a security has a duration of 5 years and
          interest rates go up by 1%, it can be expected that the security price
          will move down by 5%. The trust may be subject to greater risk of
          rising interest rates than would normally be the case due to the
          current period of historically low rates.

     o    A BDC, ETF or an issuer of securities held by a BDC or ETF may be
          unwilling or unable to make principal payments and/or to declare
          distributions in the future, may call a security before its stated
          maturity, or may reduce the level of distributions declared. Issuers
          may suspend dividends during the life of the trust. This may result in
          a reduction in the value of your units.

     o    The financial condition of a BDC, ETF or an issuer of securities held
          by a BDC or ETF may worsen, resulting in a reduction in the value of
          your units. This may occur at any point in time, including during the
          primary offering period.

     o    Economic conditions may lead to limited liquidity and greater
          volatility. The markets for fixed-income securities, such as those
          held by certain BDCs and ETFs, may experience periods of illiquidity
          and volatility. General market uncertainty and consequent repricing
          risk have led to market imbalances of sellers and buyers, which in
          turn have resulted in significant valuation uncertainties in a variety
          of fixed-income securities. These conditions resulted, and in many
          cases continue to result in, greater volatility, less liquidity,
          widening credit spreads and a lack of price transparency, with many
          debt securities remaining illiquid and of uncertain value. These
          market conditions may make valuation of some of the securities held by
          a BDC or ETF uncertain and/or result in sudden and significant
          valuation increases or declines in its holdings.

     o    Certain BDCs and ETFs held by the trust invest in securities that are
          rated below investment-grade and are considered to be "junk"
          securities. Below investment-grade obligations are considered to be
          speculative and are subject to greater market and credit risks, and
          accordingly, the risk of non-payment or default is higher than with
          investment-grade securities. In addition, such securities may be more
          sensitive to interest rate changes and more likely to receive early
          returns of principal in falling rate environments.

     o    Certain BDCs and ETFs held by the trust may invest in securities that
          are rated as investment-grade by only one rating agency. As a result,
          such split-rated securities may have more speculative characteristics
          and are subject to a greater risk of default than securities rated as
          investment-grade by more than one rating agency.

     o    The trust invests in ADRs, a New York Registry share and U.S.-listed
          foreign securities and certain ETFs and BDCs held by the trust invest
          in foreign securities. Certain ETF's and BDC's investment in foreign
          securities and the trust's investment in U.S.-listed foreign
          securities, a New York Registry share and ADRs presents additional
          risk. ADRs are issued by a bank or trust company to evidence ownership
          of underlying securities issued by foreign corporations. New York
          Registry shares are created by a U.S. registrar so that securities of
          companies incorporated in the Netherlands may be traded on a U.S.
          exchange. Securities of foreign issuers present risks beyond those of
          domestic securities. More specifically, foreign risk is the risk that
          foreign securities will be more volatile than U.S. securities due to
          such factors as adverse economic, currency, political, social or
          regulatory developments in a country, including government seizure of
          assets, excessive taxation, limitations on the use or transfer of
          assets, the lack of liquidity or regulatory controls with respect to
          certain industries or differing legal and/or accounting standards.

     o    The trust and certain ETFs held by the trust invest in securities
          issued by companies headquartered or incorporated in countries
          considered to be emerging markets. Emerging markets are generally
          defined as countries with low per capita income in the initial stages
          of their industrialization cycles. Risks of investing in developing or
          emerging countries include the possibility of investment and trading
          limitations, liquidity concerns, delays and disruptions in settlement
          transactions, political uncertainties and dependence on international
          trade and development assistance. Companies headquartered in emerging
          market countries may be exposed to greater volatility and market risk.

     o    The trust invests in, and certain BDCs and ETFs held by the trust may
          invest in, securities issued by small-capitalization and
          mid-capitalization companies. These securities customarily involve
          more investment risk than securities of large-capitalization
          companies. Small-capitalization and mid-capitalization companies may
          have limited product lines, markets or financial resources and may be
          more vulnerable to adverse general market or economic developments.

     o    The trust invests in MLPs. MLPs are limited partnerships or limited
          liability companies that are taxed as partnerships and whose interests
          (limited partnership units or limited liability company units) are
          traded on securities exchanges like shares of common stock. Currently,
          most MLPs operate in the energy, natural resources or real estate
          sectors. Investments in MLP interests are subject to the risks
          generally applicable to companies in the energy and natural resources
          sectors, including commodity pricing risk, supply and demand risk,
          depletion risk and exploration risk.

          The benefit the trust derives from its investment in MLPs is largely
          dependent on their being treated as partnerships for federal income
          tax purposes. As a partnership, an MLP has no income tax liability at
          the entity level. If, as a result of a change in an MLP's business, an
          MLP were treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes,
          such MLP would be obligated to pay federal income tax on its income at
          the applicable corporate tax rate. If an MLP was classified as a
          corporation for federal income tax purposes, the amount of cash
          available for distribution with respect to its units would be reduced
          and any such distributions received by the trust would be taxed
          entirely as dividend income if paid out of the earnings of the MLP.
          Therefore, treatment of an MLP as a corporation for federal income tax
          purposes would result in a material reduction in the after-tax return
          to the trust, likely causing a substantial reduction in the value of
          the units of the trust.

     o    The trust and certain ETFs held by the trust invest in REITs. REITs
          may concentrate their investments in specific geographic areas or in
          specific property types, such as, hotels, shopping malls, residential
          complexes and office buildings. The value of the REITs and other real
          estate securities and the ability of such securities to distribute
          income may be adversely affected by several factors, including: rising
          interest rates; changes in the global and local economic climate and
          real estate conditions; perceptions of prospective tenants of the
          safety, convenience and attractiveness of the properties; the ability
          of the owner to provide adequate management, maintenance and
          insurance; the cost of complying with the Americans with Disabilities
          Act; increased competition from new properties; the impact of present
          or future environmental legislation and compliance with environmental
          laws; changes in real estate taxes and other operating expenses;
          adverse changes in governmental rules and fiscal policies; adverse
          changes in zoning laws; declines in the value of real estate; the
          downturn in the subprime mortgage lending market and the real estate
          markets in the United States; and other factors beyond the control of
          the issuer of the security.

     o    The trust may be susceptible to potential risks through breaches in
          cybersecurity. A breach in cybersecurity refers to both intentional
          and unintentional events that may cause the trust to lose proprietary
          information, suffer data corruption or lose operational capacity. Such
          events could cause the sponsor of the trust to incur regulatory
          penalties, reputational damage, additional compliance costs associated
          with corrective measures and/or financial loss. In addition,
          cybersecurity breaches of the trust's third-party service providers,
          or issuers in which the trust invests, can also subject the trust to
          many of the same risks associated with direct cybersecurity breaches.

     o    Inflation may lead to a decrease in the value of assets or income from
          investments.

     o    The sponsor does not actively manage the portfolio. The trust will
          generally hold, and may, when creating additional units, continue to
          buy, the same securities even though a security's outlook, market
          value or yield may have changed.

     See "Investment Risks" in Part A of the prospectus and "Risk Factors" in
Part B of the prospectus for additional information.

                               Who Should Invest

     You should consider this investment if:

     o    The trust represents only a portion of your overall investment
          portfolio;

     o    The trust is part of a longer-term investment strategy that may
          include the investment in subsequent portfolios, if available; and

     o    The trust is combined with other investment vehicles to provide
          diversification of method to your overall portfolio.

     You should not consider this investment if:

     o    You are uncomfortable with the trust's investment strategy;

     o    You are uncomfortable with the risks of an unmanaged investment in
          securities; or

     o    You want capital preservation.

                               Fees and Expenses

     The amounts below are estimates of the direct and indirect fees and
expenses that you may incur based on a $10 unit price. Actual expenses may
vary.

                                 Percentage
                                  of Public
                                  Offering    Amount Per
Investor Fees                     Price (4)    100 Units
-----------------------------   -----------   ----------
Initial sales fee
  paid on purchase (1)              0.00%       $ 0.00
Deferred sales fee (2)              1.35         13.50
Creation and
  development fee (3)               0.50          5.00
                                -----------   ----------
Maximum sales fees
  (including creation
  and development fee)              1.85%       $18.50
                                ===========   ==========
Estimated organization costs
  (amount per 100 units as
  a percentage of the public
  offering price)                       %       $_____
                                ===========   ==========

                                Approximate
Annual Fund                     % of Public
Operating                         Offering    Amount Per
Expenses                          Price (4)    100 Units
-----------------------------   -----------   ----------
Trustee's fee                     0.1050%       $1.050
Sponsor's supervisory fee         0.0300         0.300
Evaluator's fee                   0.0350         0.350
Bookkeeping and
  administrative fee              0.0350         0.350
Estimated other trust
  operating expenses (5)
Estimated acquired fund
  expenses (6)
                                -----------   ----------
 Total                                  %       $_____
                                -----------   ==========

(1)  The initial sales fee provided above is based on the unit price on the
     Inception Date. The combination of the initial and deferred sales charge
     comprises what we refer to as the "transactional sales charge." The initial
     sales charge is equal to the difference between the maximum sales charge
     and the sum of any remaining deferred sales charge and creation and
     development fee ("C&D Fee"). The percentage and dollar amount of the
     initial sales fee will vary as the unit price varies and after deferred
     fees begin. When the Public Offering Price per unit equals $10, there is no
     initial sales charge. If the price you pay for your units exceeds $10 per
     unit, you will pay an initial sales charge. Despite the variability of the
     initial sales fee, each unitholder is obligated to pay the entire
     applicable maximum sales fee.

(2)  The deferred sales charge is a fixed dollar amount equal to $0.135 per unit
     and is deducted in monthly installments of $0.045 per unit on the last
     business day of _____ 2020 through _____ 2020. The percentage provided is
     based on a $10 per unit Public Offering Price as of the Inception Date and
     the percentage amount will vary over time. If the price you pay for your
     units exceeds $10 per unit, the deferred sales fee will be less than 1.35%
     of the Public Offering Price unit. If the price you pay for your units is
     less than $10 per unit, the deferred sales fee will exceed 1.35% of the
     Public Offering Price. If units are redeemed prior to the deferred sales
     fee period, the entire deferred sales fee will be collected. If you
     purchase units after the first deferred sales fee payment has been
     assessed, your maximum sales fee will consist of an initial sales fee and
     the amount of any remaining deferred sales fee payments.

(3)  The C&D Fee compensates the sponsor for creating and developing your trust.
     The actual C&D Fee is $0.050 per unit and is paid to the sponsor at the
     close of the initial offering period, which is expected to be approximately
     three months from the Inception Date. Units purchased after the close of
     the initial offering period do not pay the C&D Fee. The percentages
     provided are based on a $10 unit as of the Inception Date and the
     percentage amount will vary over time. If the unit price exceeds $10 per
     unit, the C&D Fee will be less than 0.50% of the Public Offering Price; if
     the unit price is less than $10 per unit, the C&D Fee will exceed 0.50% of
     the Public Offering Price. However, in no event will the maximum sales fee
     exceed 1.85% of a unitholder's initial investment.

(4)  Based on 100 units with a $10 per unit Public Offering Price as of the
     Inception Date.

(5)  The estimated trust operating expenses are based upon an estimated trust
     size. Because certain of the operating expenses are fixed amounts, if the
     trust does not reach such estimated size or falls below the estimated size
     over its life, the actual amount of the operating expenses may exceed the
     amounts reflected. In some cases, the actual amount of the operating
     expenses may greatly exceed the amounts reflected. Other operating expenses
     do not include brokerage costs and other transactional fees.

(6)  Although not an actual trust operating expense, the trust, and therefore
     the unitholders of the trust, will indirectly bear similar operating
     expenses of the BDCs and ETFs held by the trust in the estimated amount
     provided above. Estimated BDC and ETF expenses are based upon the net asset
     value of the number of BDC and ETF shares held by the trust per unit
     multiplied by the Annual Operating Expenses of the BDCs and ETFs for the
     most recent fiscal year. Unitholders will therefore indirectly pay higher
     expenses than if the underlying BDCs and ETFs were held directly. Please
     note that the sponsor or an affiliate may be engaged as a service provider
     to certain BDCs and ETFs held by your trust and therefore certain fees paid
     by your trust to such BDCs and ETFs will be paid to the sponsor or an
     affiliate for its services to such BDCs and ETFs.

                                    Example

     This example helps you compare the costs of this trust with other unit
trusts and mutual funds. In the example we assume that you reinvest your
investment in a new trust every year with the maximum sales fees, the trust's
operating expenses do not change and the trust's annual return is 5%. Your
actual returns and expenses will vary. Based on these assumptions, you would
pay these expenses for every $10,000 you invest:

1 year   $
3 years
5 years
10 years

     These amounts are the same regardless of whether you sell your investment
at the end of a period or continue to hold your investment. The example does
not consider any brokerage fees the trust pays or any transaction fees that
broker-dealers may charge for processing redemption requests.

     See "Expenses of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for additional
information.




                                  Trust Portfolio

Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989
Total Income Portfolio, Series 20
The Trust Portfolio as of the Inception Date, ____________, 2020
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Percentage
                                                of Aggregate Initial Per Share    Cost To
  Ticker Company Name (1)                        Offer Price Shares    Price   Portfolio (2)(3)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
         BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT COMPANIES (_____%)

         COMMON STOCKS (_____%)





                           Trust Portfolio (continued)

Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989
Total Income Portfolio, Series 20
The Trust Portfolio as of the Inception Date, ____________, 2020
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Percentage
                                                of Aggregate Initial Per Share    Cost To
  Ticker Company Name (1)                        Offer Price Shares    Price   Portfolio (2)(3)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
         COMMON STOCKS (continued)





                           Trust Portfolio (continued)

Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989
Total Income Portfolio, Series 20
The Trust Portfolio as of the Inception Date, ____________, 2020
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Percentage
                                                of Aggregate Initial Per Share    Cost To
  Ticker Company Name (1)                        Offer Price Shares    Price   Portfolio (2)(3)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
         EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS (____%)

         MASTER LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS (____%)





                           Trust Portfolio (continued)

Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989
Total Income Portfolio, Series 20
The Trust Portfolio as of the Inception Date, ____________, 2020
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Percentage
                                                of Aggregate Initial Per Share    Cost To
  Ticker Company Name (1)                        Offer Price Shares    Price   Portfolio (2)(3)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
         REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS (____%)
                                                                               ----------------
                                                                                $
                                                                               ================


(1) All securities are represented entirely by contracts to purchase
securities, which were entered into by the sponsor on ________, 2020. All
contracts for securities are expected to be settled by the initial settlement
date for the purchase of units.

(2) Valuation of securities by the trustee was performed as of the Evaluation
Time on ________, 2020. For securities quoted on a national exchange, including
the NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc., securities are generally valued at the closing
sale price using the market value per share. For foreign securities traded on a
foreign exchange, if any, securities are generally valued at the closing sale
price on the applicable exchange converted into U.S. dollars. The trust's
investments are classified as Level 1, which refers to security prices
determined using quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.

(3) There was a $__ loss to the sponsor on the Inception Date.

The following footnotes only apply when noted.

(4) Non-income producing security.

(5) U.S.-listed foreign security based on the country of incorporation, which
may differ from the way the company is classified for investment purposes and
portfolio diversification purposes.

(6) American Depositary Receipt ("ADR")/Global Depositary Receipt ("GDR")/CHESS
Depositary Interest ("CDI")/New York Registry Share.

(7) Foreign security listed on a foreign exchange, which may differ from the
way the company is classified for investment purposes and portfolio
diversification purposes.

(8) Common stock of a real estate investment trust ("REIT").

(9) Common stock of a master limited partnership ("MLP").

================================================================================
UNDERSTANDING YOUR INVESTMENT

                                How to Buy Units

     You can buy units of your trust on any business day by contacting your
financial professional. Public offering prices of units are available daily on
the Internet at www.guggenheiminvestments.com. The unit price includes:

     o    the value of the securities,

     o    organization costs,

     o    the maximum sales fee (which includes an initial sales fee, if
          applicable, a deferred sales fee and the creation and development
          fee), and

     o    cash and other net assets in the portfolio.

     We often refer to the purchase price of units as the "offer price" or the
"Public Offering Price." We must receive your order to buy units prior to the
close of the New York Stock Exchange (normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) to give
you the price for that day. If we receive your order after this time, you will
receive the price computed on the next business day.

     Value of the Securities. The sponsor serves as the evaluator of the trust
(the "evaluator"). We cause the trustee to determine the value of the
securities as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange on each day that the
exchange is open (the "Evaluation Time").

     Pricing the Securities. The value of securities is generally determined by
using the last sale price for securities traded on a national or foreign
securities exchange or the NASDAQ Stock Market. In some cases we will price a
security based on the last asked or bid price in the over-the-counter market or
by using other recognized pricing methods. We will only do this if a security is
not principally traded on a national or foreign securities exchange or the
NASDAQ Stock Market, or if the market quotes are unavailable or inappropriate.

     If applicable, the trustee or its designee will value foreign securities
primarily traded on foreign exchanges at their fair value which may be other
than their market prices if the market quotes are unavailable or
inappropriate.

     The trustee determined the initial prices of the securities shown in
"Trust Portfolio" for your trust in this prospectus. Such prices were
determined as described above at the close of the New York Stock Exchange on
the business day before the date of this prospectus. On the first day we sell
units we will compute the unit price as of the close of the New York Stock
Exchange or the time the registration statement filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission becomes effective, if later.

     Organization Costs. During the initial offering period, part of your
purchase price includes a per unit amount sufficient to reimburse us for some
or all of the costs of creating your trust. These costs include the costs of
preparing the registration statement and legal documents, legal fees, federal
and state registration fees, the portfolio consulting fee, if applicable, and
the initial fees and expenses of the trustee. Your trust will sell securities
to reimburse us for these costs at the end of the initial offering period or
after six months, at the discretion of the sponsor. Organization costs will not
exceed the estimate set forth under "Fees and Expenses."

     Transactional Sales Fee. You pay a fee when you buy units. We refer to this
fee as the "transactional sales fee." The transactional sales fee for the trust
typically has only a deferred component of 1.35% of the Public Offering Price,
based on a $10 unit. This percentage amount of the transactional sales fee is
based on the unit price on the Inception Date. Because the transactional sales
fee equals the difference between the maximum sales fee and the C&D Fee, the
percentage and dollar amount of the transactional sales fee will vary as the
unit price varies.

     The transactional sales fee does not include the C&D Fee which is
described in "Fees and Expenses" in Part A of the prospectus and under
"Expenses of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus.

     Initial Sales Fee. On the date of deposit, the trust does not charge an
initial sales fee. However, you will be charged an initial sales fee if you
purchase your units after the first deferred sales fee payment has been
assessed or if the price you pay for your units exceeds $10 per unit. The
initial sales fee, which you will pay at the time of purchase, is equal to the
difference between the maximum sales fee (1.85% of the Public Offering Price)
and the sum of the maximum remaining deferred sales fee and the C&D Fee
(initially $0.185 per unit). The dollar amount and percentage amount of the
initial sales fee will vary over time.

     Deferred Sales Fee. We defer payment of the rest of the transactional
sales fee through the deferred sales fee ($0.135 per unit). You pay any
remaining deferred sales fee when you sell or redeem units. The trust may sell
securities to meet the trust's obligations with respect to the deferred sales
fee. Thus, no assurance can be given that the trust will retain its present
size and composition for any length of time.

     In limited circumstances and only if deemed in the best interests of
unitholders, the sponsor may delay the payment of the deferred sales fee from
the dates listed under "Fees and Expenses."

     When you purchase units of the trust, if your total maximum sales fee is
less than the fixed dollar amount of the deferred sales fee and the C&D Fee,
the sponsor will credit you the difference between your maximum sales fee and
the sum of the deferred sales fee and the C&D Fee at the time you buy units by
providing you with additional units.

     Advisory and Fee Accounts. We eliminate your transactional sales fee for
purchases made through registered investment advisers, certified financial
planners or registered broker-dealers who charge periodic fees in lieu of
commissions or who charge for financial planning or for investment advisory or
asset management services or provide these services as part of an investment
account where a comprehensive "wrap fee" is imposed (a "Fee Account").

     This discount applies during the initial offering period and in the
secondary market. Your financial professional may purchase units with the Fee
Account CUSIP numbers to facilitate purchases under this discount, however, we
do not require that you buy units with these CUSIP numbers to qualify for the
discount. If you purchase units with these special CUSIP numbers, you should be
aware that you may have the distributions automatically reinvest into
additional units of your trust or receive cash distributions. We reserve the
right to limit or deny purchases of units not subject to the transactional
sales fee by investors whose frequent trading activity we determine to be
detrimental to your trust. We, as sponsor, will receive and you will pay the
C&D Fee. See "Expenses of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for additional
information.

     Employees. We do not charge the portion of the transactional sales fee
that we would normally pay to your financial professional for purchases made by
officers, directors and employees and their family members (spouses, children
under the age of 21 living in the same household and parents) of Guggenheim
Funds and its affiliates, or by employees of selling firms and their family
members (spouses, children under the age of 21 living in the same household and
parents). You pay only the portion of the fee that the sponsor retains. Such
purchases are also subject to the C&D Fee. This discount applies during the
initial offering period and in the secondary market. Only those broker-dealers
that allow their employees to participate in employee discount programs will be
eligible for this discount.

     Dividend Reinvestment Plan. We do not charge any transactional sales fee
when you reinvest distributions from your trust into additional units of the
trust. Since the deferred sales fee is a fixed dollar amount per unit, your
trust must charge the deferred sales fee per unit regardless of this discount.
If you elect the distribution reinvestment plan, we will credit you with
additional units with a dollar value sufficient to cover the amount of any
remaining deferred sales fee that will be collected on such units at the time
of reinvestment. The dollar value of these units will fluctuate over time. This
discount applies during the initial offering period and in the secondary
market.

     See "Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units" in Part B of the
prospectus for more information regarding buying units.

     How We Distribute Units. We sell units to the public through broker-dealers
and other firms. We pay part of the sales fee you pay to these distribution
firms when they sell units. The distribution fee paid is 1.25% of the Public
Offering Price per unit.

     Eligible dealer firms and other selling agents that sell units of
Guggenheim Funds unit trusts in the primary market are eligible to receive
additional compensation for volume sales. Such payments will be in addition to
the regular concessions paid to dealer firms as set forth in the applicable
trust's prospectus. For this volume concession, Guggenheim Investment Grade
Corporate Trust 3-7 Year, Investment Grade Corporate Trust 3-7 Year, Guggenheim
Investment Grade Corporate Trust 5-8 Year and Guggenheim Short Duration High
Yield Trust are designated as "Fixed Income Trusts" and all other Guggenheim
Funds unit trusts are designated as "Equity Trusts." Sales of Advisory Series:
Guggenheim Investment Grade Corporate Trust 3-7 Year and Advisory Series:
Investment Grade Corporate 3-7 Year Trust will not count toward this volume
concession. Eligible dealer firms and other selling agents who, during the
previous consecutive 12-month period through the end of the most recent month,
sold primary market units of eligible Guggenheim Funds unit investment trusts
in the dollar amounts shown below will be entitled to up to the following
additional sales concession on primary market sales of units during the current
month of unit investment trusts sponsored by us:

                Additional    Additional
                Concession  Concession for
Total Sales     for Equity  Fixed Income
(in millions)   Trust Units   Trust Units
------------------------------------------
$25 but less
  than $100       0.035%        0.035%
$100 but less
  than $150       0.050%        0.050%
$150 but less
  than $250       0.075%        0.075%
$250 but less
  than $1,000     0.100%        0.100%
$1,000 but less
  than $5,000     0.125%        0.100%
$5,000 but less
  than $7,500     0.150%        0.100%
$7,500 or more    0.175%        0.100%

     Dealer firms or other selling agents deemed to be an underwriter for a
Fixed Income Trust will not be eligible to receive the above sales concession
on the underwrittern units for that trust. However, Fixed Income Trust units
sold in an underwriting will be included in the total sales calculation when
determining the appropriate sales concession level for the dealer firm or other
selling agent. Please see the respective Fixed Income Trust's prospectus for
more information.

     Eligible unit trusts include Fixed Income Trusts and Equity Trusts sold in
the primary market. Redemptions of units during the primary offering period
will reduce the amount of units used to calculate the volume concessions. In
addition, dealer firms will not receive volume concessions on the sale of units
which are not subject to a transactional sales fee. However, such sales will be
included in determining whether a firm has met the sales level breakpoints for
volume concessions.

     Guggenheim Funds reserves the right to modify or terminate the volume
concession program at any time. The sponsor may also pay to certain dealers an
administrative fee for information or service used in connection with the
distribution of trust units. Such amounts will be in addition to any concessions
received for the sale of units.

     In addition to the concessions described above, the sponsor may pay
additional compensation out of its own assets to broker-dealers that meet
certain sales targets and that have agreed to provide services relating to the
trust to their customers.

     Other Compensation and Benefits to Broker-Dealers. The sponsor, at its own
expense and out of its own profits, may provide additional compensation and
benefits to broker-dealers who sell shares of units of this trust and other
Guggenheim products. This compensation is intended to result in additional
sales of Guggenheim products and/or compensate broker-dealers and financial
advisors for past sales. A number of factors are considered in determining
whether to pay these additional amounts. Such factors may include, but are not
limited to, the level or type of services provided by the intermediary, the
level or expected level of sales of Guggenheim products by the intermediary or
its agents, the placing of Guggenheim products on a preferred or recommended
product list, access to an intermediary's personnel, and other factors.

     The sponsor makes these payments for marketing, promotional or related
expenses, including, but not limited to, expenses of entertaining retail
customers and financial advisers, advertising, sponsorship of events or
seminars, obtaining information about the breakdown of unit sales among an
intermediary's representatives or offices, obtaining shelf space in
broker-dealer firms and similar activities designed to promote the sale of the
sponsor's products. The sponsor may make such payments to many intermediaries
that sell Guggenheim products. The sponsor may also make certain payments to, or
on behalf of, intermediaries to defray a portion of their costs incurred for the
purpose of facilitating unit sales, such as the costs of developing trading or
purchasing trading systems to process unit trades.

     Payments of such additional compensation, some of which may be
characterized as "revenue sharing," may create an incentive for financial
intermediaries and their agents to sell or recommend a Guggenheim product,
including the trust, over products offered by other sponsors or fund companies.
These arrangements will not change the price you pay for your units.

     We generally register units for sale in various states in the United
States. We do not register units for sale in any foreign country. It is your
financial professional's responsibility to make sure that units are registered
or exempt from registration if you are a foreign investor or if you want to buy
units in another country. This prospectus does not constitute an offer of units
in any state or country where units cannot be offered or sold lawfully. We may
reject any order for units in whole or in part.

     We may gain or lose money when we hold units in the primary or secondary
market due to fluctuations in unit prices. The gain or loss is equal to the
difference between the price we pay for units and the price at which we sell or
redeem them. We may also gain or lose money when we deposit securities to
create units. For example, we lost the amount set forth in the "Trust
Portfolio" on the initial deposit of securities into the trust.

     See "Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units" in Part B of the
prospectus for additional information.

                             How to Sell Your Units

     You can sell your units on any business day by contacting your financial
professional or, in some cases, the trustee. Unit prices are available daily on
the Internet at www.guggenheiminvestments.com or through your financial
professional. We often refer to the sale price of units as the "liquidation
price." You pay any remaining deferred sales fee when you sell or redeem your
units. Certain broker-dealers may charge a transaction fee for processing unit
redemptions or sale requests.

     Until the end of the initial offering period or six months after the
Inception Date, at the discretion of the sponsor, the price at which the
trustee will redeem units and the price at which the sponsor may repurchase
units include estimated organization costs. After such period, the amount paid
will not include such estimated organization costs. If units of the trust are
redeemed prior to the deferred sales fee period, the entire deferred sales fee
will be collected.

     Selling Units. We do not intend to but may maintain a secondary market for
units. This means that if you want to sell your units, we may buy them at the
current price which is based on their net asset value. We may then resell the
units to other investors at the Public Offering Price or redeem them for the
redemption price. Our secondary market repurchase price is generally the same
as the redemption price. Certain broker-dealers might also maintain a secondary
market in units. You should contact your financial professional for current
unit prices to determine the best price available. We may discontinue our
secondary market at any time without notice. Even if we do not make a market,
you will be able to redeem your units with the trustee on any business day for
the current price.

     Redeeming Units. You may also be able to redeem your units directly with
the trustee, The Bank of New York Mellon, on any day the New York Stock
Exchange is open. The trustee must receive your completed redemption request
prior to the close of the New York Stock Exchange for you to receive the unit
price for a particular day. (For what constitutes a completed redemption
request, see "Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units--Redemption" in Part B
of the prospectus.) If your request is received after that time or is
incomplete in any way, you will receive the next price computed after the
trustee receives your completed request. Rather than contacting the trustee
directly, your financial professional may also be able to redeem your units by
using the Investors' Voluntary Redemptions and Sales (IVORS) automated
redemption service offered through Depository Trust Company.

     If you redeem your units, the trustee will generally send you a payment
for your units no later than two business days after it receives all necessary
documentation. At the sponsor's discretion, certain redemptions may be made by
an in-kind distribution of the securities underlying the units in lieu of
cash.

     You can generally request an in-kind distribution of the securities
underlying your units if you own units worth at least $25,000 or you originally
paid at least that amount for your units. This option is generally available
only for securities traded and held in the United States and is not available
within 30 business days of the trust's termination. We may modify or
discontinue this option at any time without notice. If you request an in-kind
distribution of the securities underlying units of your trust, you will incur
any distribution or service fees (Rule 12b-1 fees) applicable to those
securities.

     For more complete information regarding selling or redeeming your units,
see "Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units" in Part B of the prospectus.

                                 Distributions

     Dividends. Your trust generally pays dividends from its net investment
income, if any, along with any excess capital on each distribution date to
unitholders of record on the preceding record date.

     The income distribution to the unitholders of the trust as of each record
date will be made on the following distribution date or shortly thereafter and
shall consist of an amount substantially equal to such portion of each
unitholder's pro rata share of the estimated net annual income distributions in
the Income Account. Because income payments are not received by the trust at a
constant rate throughout the year, such distributions to unitholders may be
more or less than the amount credited to the Income Account as of the record
date. For the purpose of minimizing fluctuation in the distributions from the
Income Account, the trustee is authorized in certain circumstances to advance
such amounts as may be necessary to provide income distributions of
approximately equal amounts. The trustee shall be reimbursed, without interest,
for any such advances from funds in the Income Account on the ensuing record
date.

     You can elect to:

     o    reinvest distributions in additional units of your trust at no fee, or

     o    receive distributions in cash.

     You may change your election by contacting your financial professional or
the trustee. Once you elect to participate in a reinvestment program, the
trustee will automatically reinvest your distributions into additional units at
their net asset value two business days prior to the distribution date. We waive
the sales fee for reinvestments into units of your trust. We cannot guarantee
that units will always be available for reinvestment. If units are unavailable,
you will receive cash distributions. We may discontinue these options at any
time without notice.

     In some cases, your trust might pay a special distribution if it holds an
excessive amount of principal pending distribution. For example, this could
happen as a result of a merger or similar transaction involving a company whose
security is in your portfolio. In addition, your trust may pay a special
distribution in order to maintain the qualification of your trust as a
regulated investment company or to provide funds to make any distribution for a
taxable year in order to avoid imposition of any income or excise tax on
undistributed income in the trust. The amount of your distributions will vary
from time to time as companies change their dividends or default on interest
payments, trust expenses change or as a result of changes in the trust's
portfolio.

     Reinvest in Your Trust. You can keep your money working by electing to
reinvest your distributions in additional units of your trust. The easiest way
to do this is to have your financial professional purchase units with one of
the Reinvestment CUSIP numbers listed in the "Investment Summary" section of
this prospectus. You may also make or change your election by contacting your
financial professional or the trustee. This reinvestment option may be subject
to availability or limitation by the broker-dealer or selling firm. In certain
circumstances, broker-dealers may suspend or terminate the offering of a
reinvestment option at any time.

     Reports. The trustee will send your financial professional a statement
showing income and other receipts of your trust for each distribution. Each
year the trustee will also provide an annual report on your trust's activity
and certain tax information. You can request copies of security evaluations to
enable you to complete your tax forms and audited financial statements for your
trust, if available.

     See "Administration of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for
additional information.

                                Investment Risks

     All investments involve risk. This section describes the main risks that
can impact the value of the securities in your trust. You should understand
these risks before you invest. You could lose some or all of your investment in
the trust. Recently, equity markets have experienced significant volatility. If
the value of the securities in your trust falls, the value of your units will
also fall. We cannot guarantee that your trust will achieve its objective or
that your investment return will be positive over any period.

     Market risk. Market risk is the risk that a particular security in the
trust, the trust itself or securities in general may fall in value. Market
value may be affected by a variety of factors including:

     o    General securities markets movements;

     o    Changes in the financial condition of an issuer or a sector;

     o    Changes in perceptions about an issuer or a sector;

     o    Interest rates and inflation;

     o    Governmental policies and litigation; and

     o    Purchases and sales of securities by the trust.

     Even though we carefully supervise the portfolio, you should remember that
we do not manage the portfolio. The trust will not sell a security solely
because the market value falls as is possible in a managed fund.

     Exchange-traded funds risk. The trust invests in shares of ETFs, which are
investment pools that hold other securities. ETFs are often passively-managed
index funds that seek to replicate the performance or composition of a
recognized securities index. The ETFs held by the trust are either open-end
management investment companies or unit investment trusts registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended. Unlike mutual funds or unit
investment trusts, ETFs generally do not sell or redeem their individual shares
at net asset value. ETFs generally sell and redeem shares in large blocks,
often referred to as "creation units," however, the sponsor does not intend to
sell or redeem ETFs in this manner. Shares of ETFs are listed on securities
exchanges for trading, which allows investors to purchase and sell individual
ETF shares at current market prices throughout the day. The trust will purchase
and sell ETF shares on these securities exchanges. ETFs therefore possess
characteristics of traditional open-end mutual funds and unit investment
trusts, which issue redeemable shares, and of corporate common stocks or
closed-end funds, which generally issue shares that trade at negotiated prices
on securities exchanges and are not redeemable.

     ETFs are subject to various risks, including management's ability to meet
the fund's investment objective. The trust is also subject to the risks to which
the underlying ETFs may be subject, as well as the ETFs' management and
operating expenses. You will bear not only your share of your trust's expenses,
but also the expenses of the ETFs. By investing in the ETFs, the trust incurs
greater expenses than you would incur if you invested directly in the ETFs.
Shares of ETFs may trade at a discount from their net asset value in the
secondary market. This risk is separate and distinct from the risk that the net
asset value of the ETF shares may decrease. The amount of such discount from net
asset value is subject to change from time to time in response to various
factors.

     Index correlation risk. Index correlation risk is the risk that the
performance of an index-tracking ETF will vary from the actual performance of
the ETF's target index, known as "tracking error." This can happen due to fund
expenses, transaction costs, market impact, corporate actions (such as mergers
and spinoffs) and timing variances. Some ETFs use a technique called
"representative sampling," which means that the ETF invests in a representative
sample of securities in its target index rather than all of the index
securities. The use of representative sampling could increase the risk of a
tracking error.

     Business development companies risk. BDCs are closed-end funds that have
elected to be treated as business development companies under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended. BDCs' ability to grow and their overall
financial condition is impacted significantly by their ability to raise capital.
In addition to raising capital through the issuance of common stock, BDCs may
engage in borrowing, which may involve using revolving credit facilities, the
securitization of loans through separate wholly-owned subsidiaries and issuing
of debt and preferred securities. BDCs are less restricted than other closed-end
funds as to the amount of debt they can have outstanding. A BDC's credit rating
may change over time, which could adversely affect their ability to obtain
additional credit and/or increase the cost of such borrowing. Agreements
governing BDC's credit facilities and related funding and service agreements may
contain various covenants that limit the BDC's discretion in operating its
business along with other limitations. Any defaults may restrict the BDC's
ability to manage assets securing related assets which may adversely impact the
BDC's liquidity and operations.

     BDCs are generally leveraged, which may magnify the potential for gains
and losses on amounts invested and, accordingly, may increase the risks
associated with those securities. While the value of a BDC's assets increases,
leveraging would cause the net value per share of BDC common stock to increase
more sharply than it would have had such BDC not leveraged. However, if the
value of a BDC's assets decreases, leveraging would cause net asset value to
decline more sharply than it otherwise would have had such BDC not leveraged.
In addition to decreasing the value of a BDC's common stock, it could also
adversely impact a BDC's ability to make dividend payments.

     BDCs compete with other BDCs along with a large number of investment
funds, investment banks and other sources of financing to make their
investments. Competitors may have lower costs or access to funding sources that
cause BDCs to lose prospective investments if they do not match competitors'
pricing, terms and structure. As a result of this competition, there is no
assurance that a BDC will be able to identify and take advantage of attractive
investment opportunities or that they will fully be able to invest available
capital.

     BDC investments are frequently not publicly traded and, as a result, there
is uncertainty as to the value and liquidity of those investments. BDCs may use
independent valuation firms to value their investments and such valuations may
be uncertain, be based on estimates and/or differ materially from that which
would have been used if a ready market for those investments existed. The value
of a BDC could be adversely affected if its determinations regarding the fair
value of investments was materially higher than the value realized upon sale of
such investments. Due to the relative illiquidity of certain BDC investments,
if a BDC is required to liquidate all or a portion of its portfolio quickly, it
may realize significantly less than the value at which such investments are
recorded. Further restrictions may exist on the ability to liquidate certain
assets to the extent that subsidiaries or related parties have material
nonpublic information regarding such assets.

     BDCs may enter into hedging transactions and utilize derivative
instruments such as forward contracts, options and swaps. Unanticipated
movements and improper correlation of hedging instruments may prevent a BDC
from hedging against exposure to risk of loss.

     BDCs are required to make available significant managerial assistance to
their portfolio companies. Significant managerial assistance refers to any
arrangement whereby a BDC provides significant guidance and counsel concerning
the management, operations, or business objectives and policies of a portfolio
company. Examples of such activities include arranging financing, managing
relationships with financing sources, recruiting management personnel, and
evaluating acquisition and divestiture opportunities. BDCs are frequently
externally managed by an investment adviser that may also provide this external
managerial assistance to portfolio companies. Such investment adviser's
liability may be limited under their investment advisory agreement, which may
lead such investment adviser to act in a riskier manner than it would were it
investing for its own account. Such investment advisers may be entitled to
incentive compensation, which may cause such adviser to make more speculative
and riskier investments than it would if investing for its own account. Such
compensation may be due even in the case of declines to the value of a BDC's
investments.

     BDCs may issue options, warrants, and rights to convert to voting
securities to its officers, employees and board members. Any issuance of
derivative securities requires the approval of the company's board of directors
and authorization by the company's shareholders. A BDC may operate a
profit-sharing plan for its employees, subject to certain restrictions.

     BDCs frequently have high expenses, which may include, but are not limited
to, the payment of management fees, administration expenses, taxes, interest
payable on debt, governmental charges, independent director fees and expenses,
valuation expenses and fees payable to third parties relating to or associated
with making investments. In addition, a BDC may pay an incentive fee to its
investment adviser. The potential for the investment adviser to earn incentive
fees may create an incentive for the investment adviser to make investments that
are riskier or more speculative than would otherwise be in the best interests of
the BDC. Additionally, if the base management fee is based on gross assets, the
investment adviser may have an incentive to increase portfolio leverage in order
to earn higher base management fees. These incentives raise the expenses paid by
a BDC. The trust will indirectly bear these expenses and estimated BDC expenses
are shown in the trust's annual operating expenses under "Fee Table" to
illustrate the impact of their impact. These expenses may fluctuate
significantly over time.

     If a BDC fails to maintain its status as a BDC it may be regulated as a
closed-end fund, which would subject such BDC to additional regulatory
restrictions and significantly decrease its operating flexibility. In addition,
such failure could trigger an event of default under certain outstanding
indebtedness, which could have a material adverse impact on its business.

     Limited liquidity and volatility risk. The markets for fixed-income
securities, such as those held by certain BDCs and ETFs in the trust, may
experience periods of illiquidity and volatility. General market uncertainty
and consequent repricing risk have led to market imbalances of sellers and
buyers, which in turn have resulted in significant valuation uncertainties in a
variety of fixed-income securities. These conditions resulted, and in many
cases continue to result in, greater volatility, less liquidity, widening
credit spreads and a lack of price transparency, with many debt securities
remaining illiquid and of uncertain value. These market conditions may make
valuation of some of the securities held by a BDC or ETF uncertain and/or
result in sudden and significant valuation increases or declines in its
holdings.

     Governmental cost burdens may be reallocated among federal, state and
local governments. In addition, laws enacted in the future by Congress or state
legislatures or referenda could extend the time for payment of principal and/or
interest, or impose other constraints on enforcement of such obligations, or on
the ability of municipalities to levy taxes. Issuers of bonds and certain
fixed-income securities might seek protection under the bankruptcy laws.

     Credit and income risk. Credit risk is the risk that the issuer of a debt
security held by a BDC or ETF in the trust is unable to make interest and/or
principal payments on the security. An issuer's credit rating or general market
assessments of the issuer's ability to pay its obligations may affect the
market value of the securities in the trust.

     Interest rate risk. Interest rate risk is the risk that the value of
securities held by a BDC or ETF in your trust will decline in value because of
a rise in interest rates. Generally, securities that pay fixed rates of return
will increase in value when interest rates decline and decrease in value when
interest rates rise. Typically, securities that pay fixed rates of return with
longer periods before maturity are more sensitive to interest rate changes. The
trust may be subject to greater risk of rising interest rates than would
normally be the case due to the current period of historically low rates.

     Call risk. Call risk is the risk that securities held by a BDC or ETF in
your trust can be prepaid or "called" by the issuer before their stated
maturity. If securities are called, your income will decline and you may not be
able to reinvest the money you receive at as high a yield. Also, an early call
at par of a security trading at a premium will reduce your return. Securities
held by a BDC or ETF in the trust are more likely to be called when interest
rates decline. The securities may also be subject to special or extraordinary
call provisions and "mandatory put" features that may cause the securities to
be removed from a fund prior to maturity or stated call dates. High-yield or
"junk" securities that are rated below investment-grade are generally more
susceptible to this risk than investment-grade securities.

     Security quality risk. Security quality risk is the risk that a reduction
in a security's rating may decrease its value, the value of a BDC or ETF and the
value of your investment in your trust. Securities ratings may be reduced at any
time, including during the primary offering period of your trust.

     High-yield securities risk. Certain BDCs and ETFs held by your trust
invest in high-yield or "junk" securities. High-yield securities are subject to
greater market fluctuations and risk of loss than securities with higher
investment ratings. The value of these securities will decline significantly
with increases in interest rates because an increase in rates generally
decreases values. An economic slowdown, or a reduction in an issuer's
creditworthiness, may affect an issuer's ability to make dividend or interest
payments.

     High-yield or "junk" securities, the general names for securities rated
below investment-grade, are frequently issued by corporations in the growth
stage of their development or by established companies who are highly leveraged
or whose operations or industries are depressed. Obligations rated below
investment-grade should be considered speculative as these ratings indicate a
quality of less than investment-grade. Because high-yield securities are
generally subordinated obligations and are perceived by investors to be riskier
than higher rated, senior securities, their prices tend to fluctuate more than
higher rated securities and are affected by short-term credit developments to a
greater degree.

     The market for high-yield securities is smaller and less liquid than that
for investment-grade securities. High-yield securities are generally not listed
on a national securities exchange but trade in the over-the-counter markets. Due
to the smaller, less liquid market for high-yield securities, the bid-offer
spread on such securities is generally greater than it is for investment-grade
securities and the purchase or sale of such securities may take longer to
complete and may include higher execution expenses.

     Split-ratings risk. Split-rated securities are those securities that, at
the time of investment, are rated below investment-grade by one rating agency,
so long as at least one other rating agency rates such securities within the
four highest grades (i.e., investment-grade quality). This means that a
split-rated security may be regarded by one rating agency as having
predominately speculative characteristics with respect to the issuer's capacity
to pay interest and repay principal, and accordingly subject to a greater risk
of default. The prices of split-rated securities, in the view of one but not
all rating agencies, may be more sensitive than securities without a
split-rating to negative developments, such as a decline in the issuer's
revenues or a general economic downturn.

     Foreign securities risk. The trust invests in ADRs, a New York Registry
share and U.S.-listed foreign securities, and certain ETFs and BDCs held by the
trust invest in foreign securities. ADRs are issued by a bank or trust company
to evidence ownership of underlying securities issued by foreign corporations.
New York Registry shares are created by a U.S. registrar so that securities of
companies incorporated in the Netherlands may be traded on a U.S. exchange.
Securities of foreign issuers present risks beyond those of domestic securities.
The prices of foreign securities can be more volatile than U.S. securities due
to such factors as political, social and economic developments abroad, the
differences between the regulations to which U.S. and foreign issuers and
markets are subject, the seizure by the government of company assets, excessive
taxation, withholding taxes on dividends and interest, limitations on the use or
transfer of portfolio assets, and political or social instability. Other risks
include the following:

     o    Enforcing legal rights may be difficult, costly and slow in foreign
          countries, and there may be special problems enforcing claims against
          foreign governments.

     o    Foreign issuers may not be subject to accounting standards or
          governmental supervision comparable to U.S. issuers, and there may be
          less public information about their operations.

     o    Foreign markets may be less liquid and more volatile than U.S.
          markets.

     o    Foreign securities often trade in currencies other than the U.S.
          dollar. Changes in currency exchange rates may affect the trust's
          value, the value of dividends and interest earned, and gains and
          losses realized on the sale of securities. An increase in the strength
          of the U.S. dollar relative to these other currencies may cause the
          value of the trust to decline. Certain foreign currencies may be
          particularly volatile, and foreign governments may intervene in the
          currency markets, causing a decline in value or liquidity in the
          trust's foreign security holdings.

     o    Future political and governmental restrictions which might adversely
          affect the payment or receipt of income on the foreign securities.

     Emerging market risk. The trust and certain ETFs held by your trust invest
in securities issued by companies headquartered or incorporated in countries
considered to be emerging markets. Emerging markets are generally defined as
countries with low per capita income in the initial stages of their
industrialization cycles. Risks of investing in developing or emerging countries
include the possibility of investment and trading limitations, liquidity
concerns, delays and disruptions in settlement transactions, political
uncertainties and dependence on international trade and development assistance.
In addition, emerging market countries may be subject to overburdened
infrastructures, obsolete financial systems and environmental problems. For
these reasons, investments in emerging markets are often considered speculative.

     Preferred securities risk. Certain ETFs held by the trust invest in
preferred securities, including preferred stock and hybrid preferred
securities.

     Similar to bonds, preferred stocks typically offer a fixed rate of return,
paid in the form of a dividend. Like common stock, most preferred stocks are
equity securities representing ownership in a company. Preferred stocks are
generally considered "senior equity securities" and preferred stockholders
enjoy preference over common stockholders with regard to liquidations. For the
prospect of a higher or stated yield, preferred stockholders may forfeit or at
least be limited in their voting rights. Preferred stocks are generally traded
on national stock exchanges. Preferred securities are typically subordinated to
bonds and other debt instruments in a company's capital structure, in terms of
priority in liquidation and therefore will be subject to greater credit risk
than those debt instruments.

     Generally, preferred securities may be subject to provisions that allow an
issuer, under certain conditions, to skip or defer distributions without any
adverse consequences to the issuer. If an ETF owns a preferred security that is
deferring its distribution, the ETF may be required to report income for tax
purposes although it has not yet received such income. Certain preferred
securities are "noncumulative." As a result, these securities will not
distribute any unpaid or omitted dividends from the prior year. If an issuer
chooses not to pay dividends in a given year, the ETF will not have the right to
claim the unpaid dividends in the future.

     Certain hybrid preferred securities are securities typically issued by
corporations, generally in the form of interest-bearing notes or preferred
securities, or by an affiliated business trust of a corporation, generally in
the form of beneficial interest in subordinated debentures issued by the
corporation. Hybrid preferred securities may possess varying combinations of
features of debt and preferred securities.

     Tax or regulatory changes taken by the Internal Revenue Service may change
the tax characterization of preferred securities and, as a result, may effect
the value of your units.

     Senior loan risk. Certain ETFs held by the trust invest in senior loans.
Senior loans in which the ETFs invest:

     o    generally are of below investment-grade credit quality;

     o    may be unrated at the time of investment;

     o    may be floating-rate instruments in which the interest rate payable on
          the obligations fluctuates on a periodic basis based upon changes in
          the base lending rate;

     o    generally are not registered with the SEC or any state securities
          commission; and

     o    generally are not listed on any securities exchange.

     The amount of public information available on senior loans generally will
be less extensive than that available for other types of assets.

     No reliable, active trading market currently exists for many senior loans,
although a secondary market for certain senior loans has developed over the
past several years. Senior loans are thus relatively illiquid. Liquidity
relates to the ability of an ETF to sell an investment in a timely manner at a
price approximately equal to its value on the ETF's books. The illiquidity of
senior loans may impair an ETF's ability to realize the full value of its
assets in the event of a voluntary or involuntary liquidation of such assets.
Because of the lack of an active trading market, illiquid securities are also
difficult to value and prices provided by external pricing services may not
reflect the true value of the securities. However, many senior loans are of a
large principal amount and are held by a large number of financial
institutions. To the extent that a secondary market does exist for certain
senior loans, the market may be subject to irregular trading activity, wide
bid/ask spreads and extended trade settlement periods. The market for senior
loans could be disrupted in the event of an economic downturn or a substantial
increase or decrease in interest rates. This could result in increased
volatility in the market and in your trust's net asset value.

     If legislation or state or federal regulators impose additional
requirements or restrictions on the ability of financial institutions to make
loans that are considered highly leveraged transactions, the availability of
senior loans for investment by the ETFs may be adversely affected. In addition,
such requirements or restrictions could reduce or eliminate sources of financing
for certain borrowers. This would increase the risk of default. If legislation
or federal or state regulators require financial institutions to dispose of
senior loans that are considered highly leveraged transactions or subject such
senior loans to increased regulatory scrutiny, financial institutions may
determine to sell such senior loans. Such sales could result in depressed
prices. If an ETF attempts to sell a senior loan at a time when a financial
institution is engaging in such a sale, the price an ETF could get for the
senior loan may be adversely affected.

     Some senior loans are subject to the risk that a court, pursuant to
fraudulent conveyance or other similar laws, could subordinate the senior loans
to presently existing or future indebtedness of the borrower or take other
action detrimental to lenders. Such court action could under certain
circumstances include invalidation of senior loans. Any lender, which could
include a ETF, is subject to the risk that a court could find the lender liable
for damages in a claim by a borrower arising under the common laws of tort or
contracts or anti-fraud provisions of certain securities laws for actions taken
or omitted to be taken by the lenders under the relevant terms of a loan
agreement or in connection with actions with respect to the collateral
underlying the senior loan.

     Municipal bond risk. Certain ETFs held by the trust invest in municipal
bonds, which are subject to various risks. The primary risk associated with an
investment in municipal bonds is that the issuer or an insurer of the municipal
bond will default on principal and/or interest payments when due on the
municipal bond. In addition, fixed-rate municipal bonds are subject to further
risks, including the risk that the value of such municipal bonds will decline
with increases in interest rates or a decrease in the federal or state (if
applicable) income tax rate.

     Certain municipal bonds held by the ETFs may be original issue discount
bonds and/or zero coupon bonds. Original issue discount bonds are bonds
originally issued at less than the market interest rate. Zero coupon bonds are
original issue discount bonds that do not provide for the payment of any
current interest. Zero coupon bonds are subject to substantially greater price
fluctuations during periods of changing market interest rates than bonds of
comparable quality that pay current income.

     Certain municipal bonds held by the ETFs may have been purchased by the
sponsor or issuers of the securities in a trust on a "when issued" basis.
Municipal bonds purchased on a "when issued" basis have not yet been issued by
their governmental entity on the initial date of deposit (although such
governmental entity had committed to issue such municipal bonds). In the case
of these and/or certain other municipal bonds, the delivery of the municipal
bonds may be delayed ("delayed delivery") or may not occur.

     Certain municipal bonds held by the ETFs are subject to redemption prior
to their stated maturity date pursuant to sinking fund or call provisions. A
call or redemption provision is more likely to be exercised when the offering
price valuation of a bond is higher than its call or redemption price. Such
price valuation is likely to be higher in periods of declining interest rates.

     Floating-rate securities risk. Certain ETFs held by the trust invest in
securities that are structured as floating-rate instruments in which the
interest rate payable on the obligations fluctuates on a periodic basis based
upon changes in a base lending rate. As a result, the yield on these securities
will generally decline in a falling interest rate environment, causing the ETFs
to experience a reduction in the income they receive from these securities. A
sudden and significant increase in market interest rates may increase the risk
of payment defaults and cause a decline in the value of these investments and
the value of the ETFs held by the trust.

     Master Limited Partnership risk. The trust invests in MLPs. MLPs are
limited partnerships or limited liability companies that are taxed as
partnerships and whose interests (limited partnership units or limited
liability company units) are traded on securities exchanges like shares of
common stock. An MLP consists of a general partner and limited partners. The
general partner manages the partnership, has an ownership stake in the
partnership and is eligible to receive an incentive distribution. The limited
partners provide capital to the partnership, have a limited (if any) role in
the operation and management of the partnership and receive cash distributions.
A trust's investment in securities of MLPs, which are required to distribute
substantially all of their income to investors in order to not be subject to
entity level taxation, often offer a yield advantage over other types of
securities. Currently, most MLPs operate in the energy, natural resources or
real estate sectors. Investments in MLP interests are subject to the risks
generally applicable to companies in the energy and natural resources sectors,
including commodity pricing risk, supply and demand risk, depletion risk and
exploration risk. There are certain tax risks associated with MLPs, including
the risk that U.S. taxing authorities could challenge a trust's treatment for
federal income tax purposes of the MLPs in which the trust invests. These tax
risks, and any adverse determination with respect thereto, could have a
negative impact on the after-tax income available for distribution by the MLPs
and/or the value of a trust's investments.

     The benefit the trust derives from its investment in MLPs is largely
dependent on their being treated as partnerships for federal income tax
purposes. As a partnership, an MLP has no income tax liability at the entity
level. If, as a result of a change in an MLP's business, an MLP were treated as
a corporation for federal income tax purposes, such MLP would be obligated to
pay federal income tax on its income at the applicable corporate tax rate. If an
MLP was classified as a corporation for federal income tax purposes, the amount
of cash available for distribution with respect to its units would be reduced
and any such distributions received by the trust would be taxed entirely as
dividend income if paid out of the earnings of the MLP. Therefore, treatment of
an MLP as a corporation for federal income tax purposes would result in a
material reduction in the after-tax return to the trust, likely causing a
substantial reduction in the value of the units of the trust.

     REIT risk. The trust and certain ETFs held by the trust invest in REITs. A
REIT is a company that buys, develops, finances, and/or manages income-producing
real estate. REITs may concentrate their investments in specific geographic
areas or in specific property types, such as hotels, shopping malls, residential
complexes and office buildings. The value of the REIT and the ability of the
REIT to distribute income may be adversely affected by several factors,
including: rising interest rates; changes in the national, state and local
economic climate and real estate conditions; perceptions of prospective tenants
about the safety, convenience and attractiveness of the properties; the ability
of the owner to provide adequate management, maintenance and insurance; the cost
of complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act; increased competition
from new properties; the impact of present or future environmental legislation
and compliance with environmental laws; changes in real estate taxes and other
operating expenses; adverse changes in governmental rules and fiscal policies;
adverse changes in zoning laws; declines in the value of real estate; the
downturn in the subprime mortgage lending market in the United States; and other
factors beyond the control of the issuer of the REIT.

     Small-capitalization and mid-capitalization company risk. The trust
includes, and certain BDCs and ETFs held by the trust may include, securities
issued by small-capitalization and mid-capitalization companies. These
securities customarily involve more investment risk than large-capitalization
companies. These additional risks are due in part to the following factors.
Small-capitalization and mid-capitalization companies may:

     o    Have limited product lines, markets or financial resources;

     o    Be new and developing companies which seek to develop and utilize new
          and/or emerging technologies. These technologies may be slow to
          develop or fail to develop altogether;

     o    Have less publicly available information;

     o    Lack management depth or experience;

     o    Be less liquid;

     o    Be more vulnerable to adverse general market or economic developments;
          and

     o    Be dependent upon products that were recently brought to market or key
          personnel.

     Passive foreign investment companies ("PFIC") risk. Your trust may invest
in companies that are considered to be PFICs. In general, PFICs are certain
non-U.S. corporations that receive at least 75% of their annual gross income
from passive sources (such as interest, dividends, certain rents and royalties
or capital gains) or that hold at least 50% of their assets in investments
producing such passive income. As a result of an investment in PFICs, your trust
could be subject to U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on
gains and certain distributions with respect to those securities, even if all
the income or gain is timely distributed to its unitholders. Your trust will not
be able to pass through to its unitholders any credit or deduction for such
taxes. Your trust may be able to make an election that could ameliorate these
adverse tax consequences. In this case, your trust would recognize as ordinary
income any increase in the value of such PFIC shares, and as ordinary loss any
decrease in such value to the extent it did not exceed prior increases included
in income. Under this election, your trust might be required to recognize in a
year income in excess of its distributions from PFICs and its proceeds from
dispositions of PFIC stock during that year, and such income would nevertheless
be subject to the distribution requirement and would be taken into account for
purposes of the 4% excise tax. Dividends paid by PFICs will not be treated as
qualified dividend income.

     Litigation and legislation risk. Your trust is also subject to litigation
and legislation risk. From time to time, various legislative initiatives are
proposed in the United States and abroad which may have a negative impact on
certain issuers represented in the trust. In addition, litigation regarding any
of the issuers of the securities or of the sectors represented by these issuer,
may raise potential bankruptcy concerns and may negatively impact the share
prices of these securities. We cannot predict what impact any pending or
threatened litigation or any bankruptcy concerns will have on the prices of the
securities.

     Cybersecurity risk. The trust may be susceptible to potential risks
through breaches in cybersecurity. A breach in cybersecurity refers to both
intentional and unintentional events that may cause the trust to lose
proprietary information, suffer data corruption or lose operational capacity.
Such events could cause the sponsor of the trust to incur regulatory penalties,
reputational damage, additional compliance costs associated with corrective
measures and/or financial loss. Cybersecurity breaches may involve unauthorized
access to digital information systems utilized by the trust through "hacking"
or malicious software coding, but may also result from outside attacks such as
denial-of-service attacks through efforts to make network services unavailable
to intended users. In addition, cybersecurity breaches of the trust's
third-party service providers, or issuers in which the trust invests, can also
subject the trust to many of the same risks associated with direct
cybersecurity breaches. The sponsor of the trust and third-party service
providers have established risk management systems designed to reduce the risks
associated with cybersecurity. However, there is no guarantee that such efforts
will succeed, especially because the trust does not directly control the
cybersecurity systems of issuers or third-party service providers.

     Inflation risk. Inflation risk is the risk that the value of assets or
income from investments will be less in the future as inflation decreases the
value of money.

     Significant unitholders risk. There may be unitholders of the trust who
hold a significant portion of the trust and, as result, a redemption by such
significant holder may have a material impact on the size, expenses and
viability of the trust.

     See "Risk Factors" in Part B of the prospectus for additional information.

                              How the Trust Works

     Your Trust. Your trust is a unit investment trust registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Securities Act of 1933. We created the
trust under a trust agreement between Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC (as
sponsor, evaluator and supervisor) and The Bank of New York Mellon (as
trustee). To create your trust, we deposited contracts to purchase securities
with the trustee along with an irrevocable letter of credit or other
consideration to pay for the securities. In exchange, the trustee delivered
units of your trust to us. Each unit represents an undivided interest in the
assets of your trust. These units remain outstanding until redeemed or until
your trust terminates.

     Changing Your Portfolio. Your trust is not a managed fund. Unlike a
managed fund, we designed your portfolio to remain relatively fixed after its
inception. Your trust will generally buy and sell securities:

     o    to pay expenses,

     o    to issue additional units or redeem units,

     o    in limited circumstances to protect the trust,

     o    to avoid direct or indirect ownership of a passive foreign investment
          company,

     o    to make required distributions or avoid imposition of taxes on the
          trust,

     o    to maintain the qualification of the trust as a regulated investment
          company, or

     o    as permitted by the trust agreement.

     You will not be able to dispose of or vote any of the securities in your
trust. As the holder of the securities, the trustee will vote the securities
and will endeavor to vote the securities such that the securities are voted as
closely as possible in the same manner and the same general proportion as are
the securities held by owners other than your trust. However, the trustee may
not be able to vote the securities in your trust that are traded on foreign
exchanges.

     In the event that an issuer of any of the securities in your trust offers
to issue new securities, or to exchange securities for trust securities, the
trustee will, at the direction of the sponsor, accept or reject such offer or
vote for or against any offer for new or exchanged securities or property in
exchange for a trust security. Should any issuance, exchange or substitution
take place, any securities, cash or property received will be deposited and
promptly sold by the trustee pursuant to the sponsor's direction, unless the
sponsor advises the trustee to keep such securities or property.

     Only the trustee may vote the shares of the BDCs and ETFs held in your
trust. The trustee will vote the shares in the same general proportion as the
shares held by other shareholders of each BDC and ETF.

     We will increase the size of your trust as we sell units. When we create
additional units, we will seek to replicate the existing portfolio. In certain
cases, the trustee may need additional time to acquire the securities necessary
to create units and consequently, the trust may not be fully invested at all
times, which may impact the trust's performance. When your trust buys
securities, it will pay brokerage or other acquisition fees. You could
experience a dilution of your investment because of these fees and fluctuations
in security prices between the time we create units and the time your trust buys
the securities. When your trust buys or sells securities, we, acting in an
agency capacity, may direct that the trust places orders with and pays brokerage
commissions to brokers that sell units or are affiliated with the trust. We will
not select firms to handle these transactions on the basis of their sale of
units of your trust or any other products sponsored by us. We cannot guarantee
that the trust will keep its present size and composition for any length of
time.

     Termination of Your Trust. Your trust will terminate no later than the
termination date listed in the "Investment Summary" section of this prospectus.
The trustee may terminate your trust early if the value of the trust is less
than $1 million or less than 40% of the value of the securities in the trust at
the end of the initial offering period. At this size, the expenses of your
trust may create an undue burden on your investment. Investors owning
two-thirds of the units in your trust may also vote to terminate the trust
early. We may also terminate your trust in other limited circumstances.

     The trustee will notify you of any termination and sell any remaining
securities. The trustee will send your final distribution to you within a
reasonable time following liquidation of all the securities after deducting
final expenses. Your termination distribution may be less than the price you
originally paid for your units.

     See "Administration of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for
additional information.

                              General Information

     Guggenheim Funds. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC specializes in the
creation, development and distribution of investment solutions for advisors and
their valued clients. We operate as a subsidiary of Guggenheim Partners, LLC.

     During our history we have been active in public and corporate finance,
have underwritten closed-end funds and have distributed bonds, mutual funds,
closed-end funds, exchange-traded funds, structured products and unit trusts in
the primary and secondary markets. We are a registered broker-dealer and member
of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). If we fail to or cannot
perform our duties as sponsor or become bankrupt, the trustee may replace us,
continue to operate your trust without a sponsor, or terminate your trust. You
can contact us at 227 W. Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606 or by using the
contacts listed on the back cover of this prospectus. Guggenheim Funds
personnel may from time to time maintain a position in certain securities held
by your trust.

     Guggenheim Funds and your trust have adopted a code of ethics requiring
Guggenheim Funds' employees who have access to information on trust
transactions to report personal securities transactions. The purpose of the
code is to avoid potential conflicts of interest and to prevent fraud,
deception or misconduct with respect to your trust.

     See "Administration of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for
additional information.

     The Trustee. The Bank of New York Mellon is the trustee of your trust. It
is a trust company organized under New York law. You can contact the trustee by
calling the telephone number on the back cover of this prospectus or write to
Unit Investment Trust Division, 2 Hanson Place, 12th Fl., Brooklyn, New York
11217. We may remove and replace the trustee in some cases without your consent.
The trustee may also resign by notifying the sponsor and investors.

     See "Administration of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for
additional information.

                                    Expenses

     Your trust will pay various expenses to conduct its operations. The
"Investment Summary" section of this prospectus shows the estimated amount of
these expenses.

     Your trust will pay a fee to the trustee for its services. The trustee
also benefits when it holds cash for your trust in non-interest bearing
accounts. Your trust will reimburse the sponsor as supervisor and evaluator for
providing portfolio supervisory services, evaluating your portfolio and
performing bookkeeping and administrative services. Our reimbursements may
exceed the costs of the services we provide to your trust but will not exceed
the costs of services provided to all Guggenheim Funds unit investment trusts
in any calendar year. In addition, the trustee may reimburse the sponsor out of
its own assets for services performed by employees of the sponsor in connection
with the operation of your trust. All of these fees may adjust for inflation
without your approval.

     Your trust will pay a fee to the sponsor for creating and developing the
trust, including determining the trust's objective, policies, composition and
size, selecting service providers and information services, and for providing
other similar administrative and ministerial functions. Your trust pays this
"creation and development fee" of $0.05 per unit from the assets of the trust
as of the close of the initial public offering period. The sponsor does not use
the fee to pay distribution expenses or as compensation for sales efforts.

     Your trust will also pay its general operating expenses, including any
licensing fees. Your trust may also pay expenses such as trustee expenses
(including legal and auditing expenses), organization expenses, various
governmental charges, fees for extraordinary trustee services, costs of taking
action to protect your trust, costs of indemnifying the trustee and Guggenheim
Funds, legal fees and expenses, expenses incurred in contacting you and costs
incurred to reimburse the trustee for advancing funds to meet distributions.
Your trust may pay the costs of updating its registration statement each year.
The trustee may sell securities to pay trust expenses.

     Your trust, and therefore the unitholders of your trust, will also
indirectly bear the expenses of the underlying BDCs and ETFs. While your trust
will not pay these expenses directly out of its assets, these expenses are
shown under "Annual Fund Operating Expenses of the Trust" in the "Fees and
Expenses" section of the prospectus to illustrate the impact of these expenses.
Please note that the sponsor or an affiliate may be engaged as a service
provider to certain BDCs and ETFs held by your trust and therefore certain fees
paid by your trust to such BDCs and ETFs will be paid to the sponsor or an
affiliate for its services to such BDCs and ETFs.

     See "Expenses of the Trust" in Part B of the prospectus for additional
information.

            Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Sponsor and Unitholders
Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989

Opinion on the financial statements

     We have audited the accompanying statement of financial condition,
including the trust portfolio on pages 12, 13, 14 and 15 of Guggenheim Defined
Portfolios, Series 1989 (the "Trust") as of ____________, 2020, the initial
date of deposit, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the
"financial statements"). In our opinion, the financial statements present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Trust as of
____________, 2020, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America.

Basis for opinion

     These financial statements are the responsibility of Guggenheim Funds
Distributors, LLC, the Sponsor. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
the Trust's financial statements based on our audit. We are a public accounting
firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United
States) ("PCAOB") and are required to be independent with respect to the Trust
in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules
and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

     We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB.
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Trust is not required to have,
nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial
reporting. As part of our audit we are required to obtain an understanding of
internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing
an opinion on the effectiveness of the Trust's internal control over financial
reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.

     Our audit included performing procedures to assess the risks of material
misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and
performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements. Our audit also included evaluating the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. Our procedures
included confirmation of cash or irrevocable letter of credit deposited for the
purchase of securities as shown in the statement of financial condition as of
____________, 2020 by correspondence with The Bank of New York Mellon, Trustee.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

     Grant Thornton LLP

     We have served as the auditor of one or more of the unit investment
trusts, sponsored by Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC and its predecessor
since 2002.

Chicago, Illinois
____________, 2020


Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989

Statement of Financial Condition
as of the Inception Date, ____________, 2020

Investment in securities
Sponsor's contracts to purchase underlying securities backed by
    letter of credit (1)(2)                                            $
                                                                       --------
                                                                       $
                                                                       ========
Liabilities and interest of unitholders
Liabilities:
    Organization costs (3)                                             $
    Creation and development fee (6)
    Deferred sales fee (4)
                                                                       ========
Interest of unitholders:
    Cost to unitholders (5)
    Less: initial sales fee (4)
    Less: organization costs, C&D and deferred sales fees (3)(4)(5)(6)
                                                                       --------
    Net interest of unitholders
                                                                       --------
          Total                                                        $
                                                                       ========
Number of units
                                                                       ========
Net Asset Value per Unit                                               $
                                                                       ========

---------
(1)  Aggregate cost of the securities is based on the closing sale price
     evaluations as determined by the trustee.

(2)  A letter of credit has been deposited with The Bank of New York Mellon,
     trustee, covering the funds (aggregating $_______) necessary for the
     purchase of the securities in the trust, represented by purchase contracts.

(3)  A portion of the Public Offering Price represents an amount sufficient to
     pay for all or a portion of the costs incurred in establishing the trust.
     These costs have been estimated at $____ per 100 units of the trust. A
     distribution will be made as of the close of the initial offering period or
     six months after the initial date of deposit (at the discretion of the
     sponsor) to an account maintained by the trustee from which this obligation
     of the investors will be satisfied. Organization costs will not be assessed
     to units that are redeemed prior to the close of the initial offering
     period or six months after the initial date of deposit (at the discretion
     of the sponsor). To the extent that actual organization costs are greater
     than the estimated amount, only the estimated organization costs added to
     the Public Offering Price will be deducted from the assets of the trust.

(4)  The aggregate cost to unitholders includes a maximum sales fee, which
     consists of an initial sales fee, if applicable, a deferred sales fee and a
     creation and development fee. If units are purchased after the first
     deferred sales fee has been assessed or if the price you pay for your units
     exceeds $10 per unit, an initial sales fee is charged, which is equal to
     the difference between the maximum sales fee and the sum of the remaining
     deferred sales fee and the creation and development fee. On the Inception
     Date, the maximum sales fee is 1.85% of the Public Offering Price
     (equivalent to 1.85% of the net amount invested). The deferred sales fee is
     equal to $0.135 per unit.

(5)  The aggregate cost to investors includes the applicable sales fee, assuming
     no reduction of sales fees.

(6)  The trust is committed to pay a creation and development fee of $5.00 per
     100 units at the close of the initial public offering period. The creation
     and development fee will not be assessed to units that are redeemed prior
     to the close of the initial offering period.


                         GUGGENHEIM DEFINED PORTFOLIOS

                        GUGGENHEIM PORTFOLIO PROSPECTUS

                          PART B DATED ________, 2020

     The prospectus for a Guggenheim Defined Portfolio (a "trust") is divided
into two parts. Part A of the prospectus relates exclusively to a particular
trust or trusts and provides specific information regarding each trust's
portfolio, strategies, investment objectives, expenses, financial highlights,
income and capital distributions, hypothetical performance information, risk
factors and optional features. Part B of the prospectus provides more general
information regarding the Guggenheim Defined Portfolios. You should read both
parts of the prospectus and retain them for future reference. Except as
provided in Part A of the prospectus, the information contained in this Part B
will apply to each trust.

                                    Contents
            General Information                              2
            Investment Policies                              2
            Risk Factors                                     3
            Administration of the Trust                     16
            Expenses of the Trust                           22
            Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage Allocation 24
            Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units       24
            Taxes                                           28
            Experts                                         31

General Information

     Each trust is one of a series of separate unit investment trusts created
under the name Guggenheim Defined Portfolios and registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Securities Act of 1933. Each trust was
created as a common law trust on the inception date described in the prospectus
under the laws of the state of New York. Each trust was created under a trust
agreement among Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC (as sponsor, evaluator and
supervisor) and The Bank of New York Mellon (as trustee).

     When your trust was created, the sponsor delivered to the trustee
securities or contracts for the purchase thereof for deposit in the trust and
the trustee delivered to the sponsor documentation evidencing the ownership of
units of the trust. After your trust is created, the sponsor may deposit
additional securities in the trust, contracts to purchase additional securities
along with cash (or a bank letter of credit in lieu of cash) to pay for such
contracted securities or cash (including a letter of credit) with instructions
to purchase additional securities. Such additional deposits will be in amounts
which will seek to replicate, as closely as practicable, the portfolio
immediately prior to such deposits. If the sponsor deposits cash, existing and
new investors may experience a dilution of their investments and a reduction in
their anticipated income because of fluctuations in the prices of the
securities between the time of the cash deposit and the purchase of the
securities and because the trust will pay the associated brokerage fees.

     A trust consists of (i) the securities listed under "Trust Portfolio" in
the prospectus as may continue to be held from time to time in the trust; (ii)
any additional securities acquired and held by the trust pursuant to the
provisions of the trust agreement; and (iii) any cash held in the accounts of
the trust. Neither the sponsor nor the trustee shall be liable in any way for
any failure in any of the securities. However, should any contract for the
purchase of any of the securities initially deposited in a trust fail, the
sponsor will, unless substantially all of the moneys held in the trust to cover
such purchase are reinvested in substitute securities in accordance with the
trust agreement, refund the cash and sales charge attributable to such failed
contract to all unitholders on the next distribution date.

Investment Policies

     The trust is a unit investment trust and is not an "actively managed"
fund. Traditional methods of investment management for a managed fund typically
involve frequent changes in a portfolio of securities on the basis of economic,
financial and market analysis. The portfolio of a trust, however, will not be
actively managed and therefore the adverse financial condition of an issuer
will not necessarily require the sale of its securities from a portfolio.

     Unitholders will not be able to dispose of or vote any of the securities
in a trust. As the holder of the securities, the trustee will vote the
securities and will endeavor to vote the securities such that the securities
are voted as closely as possible in the same manner and the same general
proportion as are the securities held by owners other than such trust. However,
the trustee may not be able to vote the securities in a trust that are traded
on foreign exchanges.

     The trust agreement provides that the sponsor may (but need not) direct
the trustee to dispose of a security in certain events such as the issuer
having defaulted on the payment on any of its outstanding obligations, the
issuer having qualified as a passive foreign investment company under the
Internal Revenue Code or the price of a security has declined to such an extent
or other such credit factors exist so that in the opinion of the sponsor the
retention of such securities would be detrimental to the trust. If a public
tender offer has been made for a security or a merger or acquisition has been
announced affecting a security, the trustee may either sell the security or
accept a tender offer for cash if the supervisor determines that the sale or
tender is in the best interest of unitholders. The trustee will distribute any
cash proceeds to unitholders. Pursuant to the trust agreement and with limited
exceptions, the trustee may sell any securities or other properties acquired in
exchange for securities such as those acquired in connection with a merger or
other transaction. If offered such new or exchanged securities or property
other than cash, the trustee shall reject the offer. However, in the event such
securities or property are nonetheless acquired by the trust, they may be
accepted for deposit in a trust and either sold by the trustee or held in a
trust pursuant to the direction of the sponsor. Proceeds from the sale of
securities (or any securities or other property received by the trust in
exchange for securities) are credited to the Capital Account for distribution
to unitholders or to meet redemptions.

     Except as stated in the trust agreement, or in the prospectus, the
acquisition by the trust of any securities other than the portfolio securities
is prohibited. The trustee may sell securities, designated by the sponsor, from
the trust for the purpose of redeeming units of a trust tendered for redemption
and the payment of expenses and for such other purposes as permitted under the
trust agreement.

     Notwithstanding the foregoing, the trustee is authorized to reinvest any
funds held in the Capital or Income Accounts, pending distribution, in U.S.
Treasury obligations which mature on or before the next applicable distribution
date. Any obligations so acquired must be held until they mature and proceeds
therefrom may not be reinvested.

     Proceeds from the sale of securities (or any securities or other property
received by a trust in exchange for securities) are credited to the Capital
Account of a trust for distribution to unitholders or to meet redemptions.
Except for failed securities and as provided in the prospectus or in the trust
agreement, the acquisition by a trust of any securities other than the
portfolio securities is prohibited. The trustee may sell securities from a
trust for limited purposes, including redeeming units tendered for redemption
and the payment of expenses.

Risk Factors

     Stocks. An investment in units of a trust should be made with an
understanding of the risks inherent in an investment in equity securities,
including the risk that the financial condition of issuers of the securities may
become impaired or that the general condition of the stock market may worsen
(both of which may contribute directly to a decrease in the value of the
securities and thus, in the value of the units) or the risk that holders of
common stock have a right to receive payments from the issuers of those stocks
that is generally inferior to that of creditors of, or holders of debt
obligations issued by, the issuers and that the rights of holders of common
stock generally rank inferior to the rights of holders of preferred stock. You
could lose some or all of your investment in the trust. Common stocks are
especially susceptible to general stock market movements and to volatile
increases and decreases in value as market confidence in and perceptions of the
issuers change. These perceptions are based on unpredictable factors including
expectations regarding government, economic, monetary and fiscal policies,
inflation and interest rates, economic expansion or contraction, and global or
regional political, economic or banking crises.

     Holders of common stock incur more risk than the holders of preferred
stocks and debt obligations because common stockholders, as owners of the
entity, have generally inferior rights to receive payments from the issuer in
comparison with the rights of creditors of, or holders of debt obligations or
preferred stock issued by the issuer. Holders of common stock of the type held
by a trust have a right to receive dividends only when and if, and in the
amounts, declared by the issuer's board of directors and to participate in
amounts available for distribution by the issuer only after all other claims on
the issuer have been paid or provided for. By contrast, holders of preferred
stock have the right to receive dividends at a fixed rate when and as declared
by the issuer's board of directors, normally on a cumulative basis, but do not
participate in other amounts available for distribution by the issuing
corporation. Cumulative preferred stock dividends must be paid before common
stock dividends and any cumulative preferred stock dividend omitted is added to
future dividends payable to the holders of cumulative preferred stock.
Preferred stocks are also entitled to rights on liquidation which are senior to
those of common stocks. Moreover, common stocks do not represent an obligation
of the issuer and therefore do not offer any assurance of income or provide the
degree of protection of capital debt securities. Indeed, the issuance of debt
securities or even preferred stock will create prior claims for payment of
principal, interest, liquidation preferences and dividends which could
adversely affect the ability and inclination of the issuer to declare or pay
dividends on its common stock or the rights of holders of common stock with
respect to assets of the issuer upon liquidation or bankruptcy. Further, unlike
debt securities which typically have a stated principal amount payable at
maturity (whose value, however, will be subject to market fluctuations prior
thereto), common stocks have neither a fixed principal amount nor a maturity
and have values which are subject to market fluctuations for as long as the
stocks remain outstanding. The value of the securities in a portfolio thus may
be expected to fluctuate over the entire life of a trust to values higher or
lower than those prevailing at the time of purchase.

     The sponsor's buying and selling of the securities, especially during the
initial offering of units of the trust or to satisfy redemptions of units may
impact upon the value of the underlying securities and the units. The
publication of the list of the securities selected for the trust may also cause
increased buying activity in certain of the stocks comprising the portfolio.
After such announcement, investment advisory and brokerage clients of the
sponsor and its affiliates may purchase individual securities appearing on the
list during the course of the initial offering period or may purchase warrants
issued by the sponsor or its affiliates which are based on the performance of
the securities on the list. The sponsor or its affiliates may also purchase
securities as a hedge against its risk on the warrants (although generally the
sponsor and its affiliates will not purchase securities for their own account
until after the trust portfolio has been acquired). Such buying activity in the
stock of these companies or issuance of the warrants prior to the purchase of
the securities by the trust may cause the trust to purchase stocks at a higher
price than those buyers who effect purchases by the trust.

     Fixed Portfolio. Investors should be aware that the trust is not "managed"
and as a result, the adverse financial condition of a company will not result in
the elimination of its securities from the portfolio of the trust except under
extraordinary circumstances. Investors should note in particular that the
securities were selected on the basis of the criteria set forth in the
prospectus and that the trust may continue to purchase or hold securities
originally selected through this process even though the evaluation of the
attractiveness of the securities may have changed. A number of the securities in
the trust may also be owned by other clients of the sponsor. However, because
these clients may have differing investment objectives, the sponsor may sell
certain securities from those accounts in instances where a sale by the trust
would be impermissible, such as to maximize return by taking advantage of market
fluctuations. In the event a public tender offer is made for a security or a
merger or acquisition is announced affecting a security, the sponsor may
instruct the trustee to tender or sell the security on the open market when, in
its opinion, it is in the best interest of the unitholders of the unit to do so.
Although the portfolio is regularly reviewed and evaluated and the sponsor may
instruct the trustee to sell securities under certain limited circumstances,
securities will not be sold by the trust to take advantage of market
fluctuations or changes in anticipated rates of appreciation. As a result, the
amount realized upon the sale of the securities may not be the highest price
attained by an individual security during the life of the trust. The prices of
single shares of each of the securities in the trust vary widely, and the effect
of a dollar of fluctuation, either higher or lower, in stock prices will be much
greater as a percentage of the lower-price stocks' purchase price than as a
percentage of the higher-price stocks' purchase price.

     Closed-End Fund Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a trust
may invest in the common stock of closed-end funds ("Closed-End Funds").
Closed-End Funds are actively managed investment companies which invest in
various types of securities. Closed-End Funds issue shares of common stock that
are traded on a securities exchange. Closed-End Funds are subject to various
risks, including management's ability to meet the Closed-End Fund's investment
objective, and to manage the Closed-End Fund portfolio when the underlying
securities are redeemed or sold, during periods of market turmoil and as
investors' perceptions regarding Closed-End Funds or their underlying
investments change.

     Shares of Closed-End Funds frequently trade at a discount from their net
asset value in the secondary market. This risk is separate and distinct from
the risk that the net asset value of Closed-End Fund shares may decrease. The
amount of such discount from net asset value is subject to change from time to
time in response to various factors.

     Certain of the Closed-End Funds included in a trust may employ the use of
leverage in their portfolios through the issuance of preferred stock. While
leverage often serves to increase the yield of a Closed-End Fund, this leverage
also subjects the Closed-End Fund to increased risks, including the likelihood
of increased volatility and the possibility that the Closed-End Fund's common
share income will fall if the dividend rate on the preferred shares or the
interest rate on any borrowing rises.

     Exchange-Traded Fund Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a
trust may invest in the common stock of exchange-traded funds ("ETFs"). ETFs are
investment pools that hold other securities. ETFs are either open-end management
investment companies or unit investment trusts registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940. Unlike typical open-end funds or unit investment trusts,
ETFs generally do not sell or redeem their individual shares at net asset value.
In addition, securities exchanges list ETF shares for trading, which allows
investors to purchase and sell individual ETF shares at current market prices
throughout the day. ETFs therefore possess characteristics of traditional
open-end funds and unit investment trusts, which issue redeemable shares, and of
corporate common stocks or closed-end funds, which generally issue shares that
trade at negotiated prices on securities exchanges and are not redeemable. ETFs
are subject to various risks, including management's ability to meet the fund's
investment objective. The underlying ETF has management and operating expenses.
You will bear not only your share of the trust's expenses, but also the expenses
of the underlying ETF. By investing in an ETF, the trust incurs greater expenses
than you would incur if you invested directly in the ETF.

     Shares of ETFs may trade at a discount from their net asset value in the
secondary market. This risk is separate and distinct from the risk that the net
asset value of the ETF shares may decrease. The amount of such discount from
net asset value is subject to change from time to time in response to various
factors.

     Market Discounts or Premiums. Certain of the securities may have been
deposited at a market discount or premium principally because their dividend
rates are lower or higher than prevailing rates on comparable securities. The
current returns of market discount securities are lower than comparably rated
securities selling at par because discount securities tend to increase in
market value as they approach maturity. The current returns of market premium
securities are higher than comparably rated securities selling at par because
premium securities tend to decrease in market value as they approach maturity.
Because part of the purchase price is returned through current income payments
and not at maturity, an early redemption at par of a premium security will
result in a reduction in yield to the trust. Market premium or discount
attributable to dividend rate changes does not indicate market confidence or
lack of confidence in the issue.

     Liquidity. Whether or not the securities are listed on a national
securities exchange, the principal trading market for the securities may be in
the over-the-counter market. As a result, the existence of a liquid trading
market for the securities may depend on whether dealers will make a market in
the securities. There can be no assurance that a market will be made for any of
the securities, that any market for the securities will be maintained or of the
liquidity of the securities in any markets made. In addition, a trust is
restricted under the Investment Company Act of 1940 from selling securities to
the sponsor. The price at which the securities may be sold to meet redemptions
and the value of a trust will be adversely affected if trading markets for the
securities are limited or absent.

     Additional Deposits. The trust agreement authorizes the sponsor to
increase the size of a trust and the number of units thereof by the deposit of
additional securities, or cash (including a letter of credit) with instructions
to purchase additional securities, in such trust and the issuance of a
corresponding number of additional units. If the sponsor deposits cash,
existing and new investors may experience a dilution of their investments and a
reduction in their anticipated income because of fluctuations in the prices of
the securities between the time of the cash deposit and the purchase of the
securities and because a trust will pay the associated brokerage fees. To
minimize this effect, the trusts will attempt to purchase the securities as
close to the evaluation time or as close to the evaluation prices as possible.

     Some of the securities may have limited trading volume. The trustee, with
directions from the sponsor, will endeavor to purchase securities with deposited
cash as soon as practicable reserving the right to purchase those securities
over the 20 business days following each deposit in an effort to reduce the
effect of these purchases on the market price of those stocks. This could,
however, result in the trusts' failure to participate in any appreciation of
those stocks before the cash is invested. If any cash remains at the end of this
period (and such date is within the 90-day period following the inception date)
and cannot be invested in one or more stocks, at what the sponsor considers
reasonable prices, it intends to use that cash to purchase each of the other
securities in the original proportionate relationship among those securities.
Similarly, at termination of the trust, the sponsor reserves the right to sell
securities over a period of up to nine business days to lessen the impact of its
sales on the market price of the securities. The proceeds received by
unitholders following termination of the trust will reflect the actual sales
proceeds received on the securities, which will likely differ from the closing
sale price on the termination date.

     Litigation and Legislation. At any time litigation may be initiated on a
variety of grounds, or legislation may be enacted with respect to the
securities in a trust or the issuers of the securities. There can be no
assurance that future litigation or legislation will not have a material
adverse effect on the trust or will not impair the ability of issuers to
achieve their business goals.

     Financial Sector Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, certain
of the issuers of securities in a trust may be involved in the financial
sector. An investment in units of a trust containing securities of such issuers
should be made with an understanding of the problems and risks inherent in the
financial sector in general.

     Banks, thrifts and their holding companies are especially subject to the
adverse effects of economic recession; volatile interest rates; portfolio
concentrations in geographic markets, in commercial and residential real estate
loans or any particular segment or industry; and competition from new entrants
in their fields of business. Banks and thrifts are highly dependent on net
interest margin. Banks and thrifts traditionally receive a significant portion
of their revenues from consumer mortgage fee income as a result of activity in
mortgage and refinance markets.

     Banks, thrifts and their holding companies are subject to extensive
federal regulation and, when such institutions are state-chartered, to state
regulation as well. Such regulations impose strict capital requirements and
limitations on the nature and extent of business activities that banks and
thrifts may pursue. Furthermore, bank regulators have a wide range of
discretion in connection with their supervisory and enforcement authority and
may substantially restrict the permissible activities of a particular
institution if deemed to pose significant risks to the soundness of such
institution or the safety of the federal deposit insurance fund. Regulatory
actions, such as increases in the minimum capital requirements applicable to
banks and thrifts and increases in deposit insurance premiums required to be
paid by banks and thrifts to the FDIC, can negatively impact earnings and the
ability of a company to pay dividends. Neither federal insurance of deposits
nor governmental regulations, however, insures the solvency or profitability of
banks or their holding companies, or insures against any risk of investment in
the securities issued by such institutions.

     The statutory requirements applicable to and regulatory supervision of
banks, thrifts and their holding companies have increased significantly and
have undergone substantial change in the recent past.

     The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Accounting
Standards Board ("FASB") require the expanded use of market value accounting by
banks and have imposed rules requiring mark-to-market accounting for investment
securities held in trading accounts or available for sale. Adoption of
additional such rules may result in increased volatility in the reported health
of the industry, and mandated regulatory intervention to correct such problems.
Accounting Standards Codification 820, "Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures"
changed the requirements of mark-to-market accounting and determining fair value
when the volume and level of activity for the asset or liability has
significantly decreased. These changes and other potential changes in financial
accounting rules and valuation techniques may have a significant impact on the
banking and financial services industries in terms of accurately pricing assets
or liabilities. Additional legislative and regulatory changes may be
forthcoming. For example, the bank regulatory authorities have proposed
substantial changes to the Community Reinvestment Act and fair lending laws,
rules and regulations, and there can be no certainty as to the effect, if any,
that such changes would have on the securities in a trust's portfolio. In
addition, from time to time the deposit insurance system is reviewed by Congress
and federal regulators, and proposed reforms of that system could, among other
things, further restrict the ways in which deposited moneys can be used by banks
or change the dollar amount or number of deposits insured for any depositor. On
October 3, 2008, EESA increased the maximum amount of federal deposit insurance
coverage payable as to any certificate of deposit from $100,000 to $250,000 per
depositor. The impact of this reform is unknown and could reduce profitability
as investment opportunities available to bank institutions become more limited
and as consumers look for savings vehicles other than bank deposits. The sponsor
makes no prediction as to what, if any, manner of bank and thrift regulatory
actions might ultimately be adopted or what ultimate effect such actions might
have on a trust's portfolio.

     The Federal Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 ("BHC Act") generally
prohibits a bank holding company from (i) acquiring, directly or indirectly,
more than 5% of the outstanding shares of any class of voting securities of a
bank or bank holding company; (ii) acquiring control of a bank or another bank
holding company; (iii) acquiring all or substantially all the assets of a bank;
or (iv) merging or consolidating with another bank holding company, without
first obtaining FRB approval. In considering an application with respect to any
such transaction, the FRB is required to consider a variety of factors,
including the potential anti-competitive effects of the transaction, the
financial condition and future prospects of the combining and resulting
institutions, the managerial resources of the resulting institution, the
convenience and needs of the communities the combined organization would serve,
the record of performance of each combining organization under the Community
Reinvestment Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and the prospective
availability to the FRB of information appropriate to determine ongoing
regulatory compliance with applicable banking laws. In addition, the federal
Change In Bank Control Act and various state laws impose limitations on the
ability of one or more individuals or other entities to acquire control of
banks or bank holding companies.

     The FRB has issued a policy statement on the payment of cash dividends by
bank holding companies in which the FRB expressed its view that a bank holding
company experiencing earnings weaknesses should not pay cash dividends which
exceed its net income or which could only be funded in ways that would weaken
its financial health, such as by borrowing. The FRB also may impose limitations
on the payment of dividends as a condition to its approval of certain
applications, including applications for approval of mergers and acquisitions.
The sponsor makes no prediction as to the effect, if any, such laws will have
on the securities in a trust or whether such approvals, if necessary, will be
obtained.

     Companies engaged in investment banking/brokerage and investment
management include brokerage firms, broker/dealers, investment banks, finance
companies and mutual fund companies. Earnings and share prices of companies in
this industry are quite volatile, and often exceed the volatility levels of the
market as a whole. Negative economic events in the credit markets have led some
firms to declare bankruptcy, forced short-notice sales to competing firms, or
required government intervention by the FDIC or through an infusions of
Troubled Asset Relief Program funds. Consolidation in the industry and the
volatility in the stock market have negatively impacted investors.

     Additionally, government intervention has required many financial
institutions to become bank holding companies under the BHC Act. Under the
system of functional regulation established under the BHC Act, the FRB
supervises bank holding companies as an umbrella regulator. The BHC Act and
regulations generally restrict bank holding companies from engaging in business
activities other than the business of banking and certain closely related
activities. The FRB and FDIC have also issued substantial risk-based and
leverage capital guidelines applicable to U.S. banking organizations. The
guidelines define a three-tier framework, requiring depository institutions to
maintain certain leverage ratios depending on the type of assets held. If any
depository institution controlled by a financial or bank holding company ceases
to meet capital or management standards, the FRB may impose corrective capital
and/or managerial requirements on the company and place limitations on its
ability to conduct broader financial activities. Furthermore, proposed
legislation will allow the Treasury and the FDIC to create a resolution regime
to "take over" bank and financial holding companies. The "taking over" would be
based on whether the firm is in default or in danger of defaulting and whether
such a default would have a serious adverse effect on the financial system or
the economy. This mechanism would only be used by the government in exceptional
circumstances to mitigate these effects. This type of intervention has unknown
risks and costs associated with it, which may cause unforeseeable harm in the
industry.

     Companies involved in the insurance industry are engaged in underwriting,
reinsuring, selling, distributing or placing of property and casualty, life or
health insurance. Other growth areas within the insurance industry include
brokerage, reciprocals, claims processors and multi-line insurance companies.
Interest rate levels, general economic conditions and price and marketing
competition affect insurance company profits. Property and casualty insurance
profits may also be affected by weather catastrophes and other disasters. Life
and health insurance profits may be affected by mortality and morbidity rates.
Individual companies may be exposed to material risks including reserve
inadequacy and the inability to collect from reinsurance carriers. Insurance
companies are subject to extensive governmental regulation, including the
imposition of maximum rate levels, which may not be adequate for some lines of
business. Proposed or potential tax law changes may also adversely affect
insurance companies' policy sales, tax obligations, and profitability. In
addition to the foregoing, profit margins of these companies continue to shrink
due to the commoditization of traditional businesses, new competitors, capital
expenditures on new technology and the pressures to compete globally.

     In addition to the normal risks of business, companies involved in the
insurance industry are subject to significant risk factors, including those
applicable to regulated insurance companies, such as: (i) the inherent
uncertainty in the process of establishing property-liability loss reserves,
particularly reserves for the cost of environmental, asbestos and mass tort
claims, and the fact that ultimate losses could materially exceed established
loss reserves which could have a material adverse effect on results of
operations and financial condition; (ii) the fact that insurance companies have
experienced, and can be expected in the future to experience, catastrophe losses
which could have a material adverse impact on their financial condition, results
of operations and cash flow; (iii) the inherent uncertainty in the process of
establishing property-liability loss reserves due to changes in loss payment
patterns caused by new claims settlement practices; (iv) the need for insurance
companies and their subsidiaries to maintain appropriate levels of statutory
capital and surplus, particularly in light of continuing scrutiny by rating
organizations and state insurance regulatory authorities, and in order to
maintain acceptable financial strength or claims-paying ability rating; (v) the
extensive regulation and supervision to which insurance companies' subsidiaries
are subject, various regulatory initiatives that may affect insurance companies,
and regulatory and other legal actions; (vi) the adverse impact that increases
in interest rates could have on the value of an insurance company's investment
portfolio and on the attractiveness of certain of its products; (vii) the need
to adjust the effective duration of the assets and liabilities of life insurance
operations in order to meet the anticipated cash flow requirements of its
policyholder obligations; and (viii) the uncertainty involved in estimating the
availability of reinsurance and the collectability of reinsurance recoverables.
This enhanced oversight into the insurance industry may pose unknown risks to
the sector as a whole.

     The state insurance regulatory framework has, during recent years, come
under increased federal scrutiny, and certain state legislatures have
considered or enacted laws that alter and, in many cases, increase state
authority to regulate insurance companies and insurance holding company
systems. Further, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners ("NAIC")
and state insurance regulators are reexamining existing laws and regulations,
specifically focusing on insurance companies, interpretations of existing laws
and the development of new laws. In addition, Congress and certain federal
agencies have investigated the condition of the insurance industry in the
United States to determine whether to promulgate additional federal regulation.
The sponsor is unable to predict whether any state or federal legislation will
be enacted to change the nature or scope of regulation of the insurance
industry, or what effect, if any, such legislation would have on the industry.

     All insurance companies are subject to state laws and regulations that
require diversification of their investment portfolios and limit the amount of
investments in certain investment categories. Failure to comply with these laws
and regulations would cause non-conforming investments to be treated as
non-admitted assets for purposes of measuring statutory surplus and, in some
instances, would require divestiture.

     Environmental pollution clean-up is the subject of both federal and state
regulation. By some estimates, there are thousands of potential waste sites
subject to clean up. The insurance industry is involved in extensive litigation
regarding coverage issues. The Comprehensive Environmental Response
Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 ("Superfund") and comparable state
statutes ("mini-Superfund") govern the cleanup and restoration by "Potentially
Responsible Parties" ("PRPs"). Superfund and the mini-Superfunds
("Environmental Clean-up Laws" or "ECLs") establish a mechanism to pay for
clean-up of waste sites if PRPs fail to do so, and to assign liability to PRPs.
The extent of liability to be allocated to a PRP is dependent on a variety of
factors. The extent of clean-up necessary and the assignment of liability has
not been fully established. The insurance industry is disputing many such
claims. Key coverage issues include whether Superfund response costs are
considered damages under the policies, when and how coverage is triggered,
applicability of pollution exclusions, the potential for joint and several
liability and definition of an occurrence. Similar coverage issues exist for
clean up and waste sites not covered under Superfund. To date, courts have been
inconsistent in their rulings on these issues. An insurer's exposure to
liability with regard to its insureds which have been, or may be, named as PRPs
is uncertain. Superfund reform proposals have been introduced in Congress, but
none have been enacted. There can be no assurance that any Superfund reform
legislation will be enacted or that any such legislation will provide for a
fair, effective and cost-efficient system for settlement of Superfund related
claims.

     While current federal income tax law permits the tax-deferred accumulation
of earnings on the premiums paid by an annuity owner and holders of certain
savings-oriented life insurance products, no assurance can be given that future
tax law will continue to allow such tax deferrals. If such deferrals were not
allowed, consumer demand for the affected products would be substantially
reduced. In addition, proposals to lower the federal income tax rates through a
form of flat tax or otherwise could have, if enacted, a negative impact on the
demand for such products.

     Major determinants of future earnings of companies in the financial
services sector are the direction of the stock market, investor confidence,
equity transaction volume, the level and direction of long-term and short-term
interest rates, and the outlook for emerging markets. Negative trends in any of
these earnings determinants could have a serious adverse effect on the
financial stability, as well as the stock prices, of these companies.
Furthermore, there can be no assurance that the issuers of the securities
included in the trust will be able to respond in a timely manner to compete in
the rapidly developing marketplace. In addition to the foregoing, profit
margins of these companies continue to shrink due to the commoditization of
traditional businesses, new competitors, capital expenditures on new technology
and the pressures to compete globally.

     Foreign Securities Risk. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a
trust, or issuers of securities held by a trust, may invest in foreign issuers,
and therefore, an investment in such a trust involves some investment risks
that are different in some respects from an investment in a trust that invests
entirely in securities of domestic issuers. Those investment risks include
future political and governmental restrictions which might adversely affect the
payment or receipt of payment of dividends on the relevant securities, currency
exchange rate fluctuations, exchange control policies, and the limited
liquidity and small market capitalization of such foreign countries' securities
markets. In addition, for foreign issuers that are not subject to the reporting
requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, there may be less publicly
available information than is available from a domestic issuer. Also, foreign
issuers are not necessarily subject to uniform accounting, auditing and
financial reporting standards, practices and requirements comparable to those
applicable to domestic issuers. However, due to the nature of the issuers of
the securities included in the trust, the sponsor believes that adequate
information will be available to allow the sponsor to provide portfolio
surveillance.

     Certain of the securities in the trust may be in ADR or GDR form. ADRs,
American Depositary Receipts and GDRs, Global Depositary Receipts, represent
common stock deposited with a custodian in a depositary. American Depositary
Receipts and Global Depositary Receipts (collectively, the "Depositary
Receipts") are issued by a bank or trust company to evidence ownership of
underlying securities issued by a foreign corporation. These instruments may
not necessarily be denominated in the same currency as the securities into
which they may be converted. For purposes of the discussion herein, the terms
ADR and GDR generally include American Depositary Shares and Global Depositary
Shares, respectively.

     Depositary Receipts may be sponsored or unsponsored. In an unsponsored
facility, the depositary initiates and arranges the facility at the request of
market makers and acts as agent for the Depositary Receipts holder, while the
company itself is not involved in the transaction. In a sponsored facility, the
issuing company initiates the facility and agrees to pay certain administrative
and shareholder-related expenses. Sponsored facilities use a single depositary
and entail a contractual relationship between the issuer, the shareholder and
the depositary; unsponsored facilities involve several depositaries with no
contractual relationship to the company. The depositary bank that issues
Depositary Receipts generally charges a fee, based on the price of the
Depositary Receipts, upon issuance and cancellation of the Depositary Receipts.
This fee would be in addition to the brokerage commissions paid upon the
acquisition or surrender of the security. In addition, the depositary bank
incurs expenses in connection with the conversion of dividends or other cash
distributions paid in local currency into U.S. dollars and such expenses are
deducted from the amount of the dividend or distribution paid to holders,
resulting in a lower payout per underlying shares represented by the Depositary
Receipts than would be the case if the underlying share were held directly.
Certain tax considerations, including tax rate differentials and withholding
requirements, arising from the application of the tax laws of one nation to
nationals of another and from certain practices in the Depositary Receipts
market may also exist with respect to certain Depositary Receipts. In varying
degrees, any or all of these factors may affect the value of the Depositary
Receipts compared with the value of the underlying shares in the local market.
In addition, the rights of holders of Depositary Receipts may be different than
those of holders of the underlying shares, and the market for Depositary
Receipts may be less liquid than that for the underlying shares. Depositary
Receipts are registered securities pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and
may be subject to the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934.

     For the securities that are Depositary Receipts, currency fluctuations
will affect the United States dollar equivalent of the local currency price of
the underlying domestic share and, as a result, are likely to affect the value
of the Depositary Receipts and consequently the value of the securities. The
foreign issuers of securities that are Depositary Receipts may pay dividends in
foreign currencies which must be converted into United States dollars. Most
foreign currencies have fluctuated widely in value against the United States
dollar for many reasons, including supply and demand of the respective
currency, the soundness of the world economy and the strength of the respective
economy as compared to the economies of the United States and other countries.
Therefore, for any securities of issuers (whether or not they are in Depositary
Receipt form) whose earnings are stated in foreign currencies, or which pay
dividends in foreign currencies or which are traded in foreign currencies,
there is a risk that their United States dollar value will vary with
fluctuations in the United States dollar foreign exchange rates for the
relevant currencies.

     Preferred Stock Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a trust,
or issuers of securities held by a trust, may invest in preferred stock. If this
is the case, an investment in units should be made with an understanding of the
risks which an investment in preferred stocks entails, including the risk that
the financial condition of the issuers of the securities or the general
condition of the preferred stock market may worsen, and the value of the
preferred stocks and therefore the value of the units may decline. Preferred
stocks may be susceptible to general stock market movements and to volatile
increases and decreases of value as market confidence in and perceptions of the
issuers change. These perceptions are based on unpredictable factors, including
expectations regarding government, economic, monetary and fiscal policies,
inflation and interest rates, economic expansion or contraction, market
liquidity, and global or regional political, economic or banking crises.
Preferred stocks are also vulnerable to congressional reductions in the
dividends-received deduction which would adversely affect the after-tax return
to the investors who can take advantage of the deduction. Such a reduction might
adversely affect the value of preferred stocks in general. Holders of preferred
stocks, as owners of the entity, have rights to receive payments from the
issuers of those preferred stocks that are generally subordinate to those of
creditors of, or holders of debt obligations or, in some cases, other senior
preferred stocks of, such issuers. Preferred stocks do not represent an
obligation of the issuer and, therefore, do not offer any assurance of income or
provide the same degree of protection of capital as do debt securities. The
issuance of additional debt securities or senior preferred stocks will create
prior claims for payment of principal and interest and senior dividends which
could adversely affect the ability and inclination of the issuer to declare or
pay dividends on its preferred stock or the rights of holders of preferred stock
with respect to assets of the issuer upon liquidation or bankruptcy. The value
of preferred stocks is subject to market fluctuations for as long as the
preferred stocks remain outstanding, and thus the value of the securities may be
expected to fluctuate over the life of the trust to values higher or lower than
those prevailing on the initial date of deposit.

     Hybrid Preferred Securities Risks. If set forth in Part A of the
prospectus, a trust, or issuers of securities held by a trust, may invest in
hybrid preferred securities. Holders of hybrid preferred securities incur risks
in addition to or slightly different than the typical risks of holding
preferred stocks. Hybrid preferred securities are preferred securities that are
typically issued by corporations, generally in the form of interest-bearing
notes or preferred securities issued by corporations, or by an affiliated
business trust of a corporation, generally in the form of beneficial interests
in subordinated debentures issued by the corporation. Certain hybrid securities
mature on the stated maturity date of the interest-bearing notes, preferred
securities or subordinated debentures and may be redeemed or liquidated prior
to the stated maturity date of such instruments for any reason on or after
their stated call date or upon the occurrence of certain circumstances at any
time. Unlike preferred stocks, distributions on the hybrid preferred securities
are generally treated as interest rather than dividends for federal income tax
purposes. Unlike most preferred stocks, distributions received from hybrid
preferred securities are generally not eligible for the dividends-received
deduction. Certain of the risks unique to certain hybrid preferred securities
include: (i) distributions on trust preferred securities will be made only if
interest payments on the interest-bearing notes, preferred securities or
subordinated debentures are made; (ii) a corporation issuing the
interest-bearing notes, preferred securities or subordinated debentures may
defer interest payments on these instruments and if such election is made,
distributions will not be made on the hybrid preferred securities during the
deferral period; (iii) certain tax or regulatory events may trigger the
redemption of the interest-bearing notes, preferred securities or subordinated
debentures by the issuing corporation and result in prepayment of the hybrid
preferred securities prior to their stated maturity date; (iv) future
legislation may be proposed or enacted that may prohibit the corporation from
deducting its interest payments on the interest-bearing notes, preferred
securities or subordinated debentures for tax purposes, making redemption of
these instruments likely; (v) a corporation may redeem the interest-bearing
notes, preferred securities or subordinated debentures in whole at any time or
in part from time to time on or after a stated call date; (vi) hybrid preferred
securities holders have very limited voting rights; and (vii) payment of
interest on the interest-bearing notes, preferred securities or subordinated
debentures, and therefore distributions on the hybrid preferred securities, is
dependent on the financial condition of the issuing corporation.

     Convertible Securities Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a
trust, or issuers of securities held by a trust, may invest in convertible
securities.

     Convertible securities generally offer lower interest or dividend yields
than non-convertible fixed-income securities of similar credit quality because
of the potential for capital appreciation. The market values of convertible
securities tend to decline as interest rates increase and, conversely, to
increase as interest rates decline. However, a convertible security's market
value also tends to reflect the market price of the common stock of the issuing
company, particularly when the stock price is greater than the convertible
security's conversion price. The conversion price is defined as the
predetermined price or exchange ratio at which the convertible security can be
converted or exchanged for the underlying common stock. As the market price of
the underlying common stock declines below the conversion price, the price of
the convertible security tends to be increasingly influenced more by the yield
of the convertible security than by the market price of the underlying common
stock. Thus, it may not decline in price to the same extent as the underlying
common stock, and convertible securities generally have less potential for gain
or loss than common stocks. However, mandatory convertible securities (as
discussed below) generally do not limit the potential for loss to the same
extent as securities convertible at the option of the holder. In the event of a
liquidation of the issuing company, holders of convertible securities would be
paid before that company's common stockholders. Consequently, an issuer's
convertible securities generally entail less risk than its common stock.
However, convertible securities fall below debt obligations of the same issuer
in order of preference or priority in the event of a liquidation and are
typically unrated or rated lower than such debt obligations. In addition,
contingent payment, convertible securities allow the issuer to claim deductions
based on its nonconvertible cost of debt, which generally will result in
deduction in excess of the actual cash payments made on the securities (and
accordingly, holders will recognize income in amounts in excess of the cash
payments received).

     Mandatory convertible securities are distinguished as a subset of
convertible securities because the conversion is not optional and the
conversion price at maturity is based solely upon the market price of the
underlying common stock, which may be significantly less than par or the price
(above or below par) paid. For these reasons, the risks associated with
investing in mandatory convertible securities most closely resemble the risks
inherent in common stocks. Mandatory convertible securities customarily pay a
higher coupon yield to compensate for the potential risk of additional price
volatility and loss upon conversion. Because the market price of a mandatory
convertible security increasingly corresponds to the market price of its
underlying common stock as the convertible security approaches its conversion
date, there can be no assurance that the higher coupon will compensate for the
potential loss.

     Senior Loan Risks. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a trust, or
issuers of securities held by a trust, may invest in senior loans.

     Senior loans in which a Closed-End Fund or an ETF may invest:

     o    generally are of below investment-grade or "junk" credit quality;

     o    may be unrated at the time of investment;

     o    generally are not registered with the SEC or any state securities
          commission; and

     o    generally are not listed on any securities exchange.

     The amount of public information available on senior loans generally will
be less extensive than that available for other types of assets.

     No reliable, active trading market currently exists for many senior loans,
although a secondary market for certain senior loans has developed over the past
several years. Senior loans are thus relatively illiquid. Liquidity relates to
the ability of a Closed-End Fund or an ETF to sell an investment in a timely
manner at a price approximately equal to its value on the Closed-End Fund's or
the ETF's books. The illiquidity of senior loans may impair a Closed-End Fund's
or the ETF's ability to realize the full value of its assets in the event of a
voluntary or involuntary liquidation of such assets. Because of the lack of an
active trading market, illiquid securities are also difficult to value and
prices provided by external pricing services may not reflect the true value of
the securities. However, many senior loans are of a large principal amount and
are held by a large number of financial institutions. To the extent that a
secondary market does exist for certain senior loans, the market may be subject
to irregular trading activity, wide bid/ask spreads and extended trade
settlement periods. The market for senior loans could be disrupted in the event
of an economic downturn or a substantial increase or decrease in interest rates.
This could result in increased volatility in the market and in the trusts' net
asset value.

     If legislation or state or federal regulators impose additional
requirements or restrictions on the ability of financial institutions to make
loans that are considered highly leveraged transactions, the availability of
senior loans for investment by the Closed-End Funds or the ETFs may be
adversely affected. In addition, such requirements or restrictions could reduce
or eliminate sources of financing for certain borrowers. This would increase
the risk of default. If legislation or federal or state regulators require
financial institutions to dispose of senior loans that are considered highly
leveraged transactions or subject such senior loans to increased regulatory
scrutiny, financial institutions may determine to sell such senior loans. Such
sales could result in depressed prices. If a Closed-End Fund or an ETF attempts
to sell a senior loan at a time when a financial institution is engaging in
such a sale, the price a Closed-End Fund or an ETF could get for the senior
loan may be adversely affected.

     Some senior loans are subject to the risk that a court, pursuant to
fraudulent conveyance or other similar laws, could subordinate the senior loans
to presently existing or future indebtedness of the borrower or take other
action detrimental to lenders. Such court action could under certain
circumstances include invalidation of senior loans. Any lender, which could
include a Closed-End Fund or an ETF, is subject to the risk that a court could
find the lender liable for damages in a claim by a borrower arising under the
common laws of tort or contracts or anti-fraud provisions of certain securities
laws for actions taken or omitted to be taken by the lenders under the relevant
terms of a loan agreement or in connection with actions with respect to the
collateral underlying the senior loan.

     Floating-Rate Securities Risk. If set forth in Part A of the prospectus, a
trust, or issuers of securities held by a trust may invest in floating-rate
securities. Certain Closed-End Funds or ETFs held by the trust may invest in
securities that are structured as floating-rate instruments in which the
interest rate payable on the obligations fluctuates on a periodic basis based
upon changes in a base lending rate. As a result, the yield on these securities
will generally decline in a falling interest rate environment, causing the
Closed-End Funds or the ETFs to experience a reduction in the income they
receive from these securities. A sudden and significant increase in market
interest rates may increase the risk of payment defaults and cause a decline in
the value of these investments and the value of the Closed-End Funds or the
ETFs held by the trust.

     Small-Capitalization and Mid-Capitalization Stocks Risk. If set forth in
Part A of the prospectus, a trust may invest in small-capitalization or
mid-capitalization stocks. Investing in small-capitalization stocks or
mid-capitalization stocks may involve greater risk than investing in
large-capitalization stocks, since they can be subject to more abrupt or erratic
price movements. Many small market capitalization companies ("Small-Cap
Companies") or middle market capitalization companies ("Mid-Cap Companies") will
have had their securities publicly traded, if at all, for only a short period of
time and will not have had the opportunity to establish a reliable trading
pattern through economic cycles. The price volatility of Small-Cap Companies and
Mid-Cap Companies is relatively higher than larger, older and more mature
companies. The greater price volatility of Small-Cap Companies and Mid-Cap
Companies may result from the fact that there may be less market liquidity, less
information publicly available or fewer investors who monitor the activities of
these companies. In addition, the market prices of these securities may exhibit
more sensitivity to changes in industry or general economic conditions. Some
Small-Cap Companies or Mid-Cap Companies will not have been in existence long
enough to experience economic cycles or to demonstrate whether they are
sufficiently well managed to survive downturns or inflationary periods. Further,
a variety of factors may affect the success of a company's business beyond the
ability of its management to prepare or compensate for them, including domestic
and international political developments, government trade and fiscal policies,
patterns of trade and war or other military conflict which may affect industries
or markets or the economy generally.

Administration of the Trust

     Distributions to Unitholders. Income received by a trust is credited by
the trustee to the Income Account of the trust. Other receipts are credited to
the Capital Account of a trust. Income received by a trust will be distributed
on or shortly after the distribution dates each year shown in the prospectus on
a pro rata basis to unitholders of record as of the preceding record date shown
in the prospectus. However, if set forth in Part A of the prospectus that the
trust will prorate distributions on an annual basis ("Income Averaging"), then
income received by the trust will be distributed on a prorated basis of
one-twelfth of the estimated annual income to the trust for the ensuing 12
months. All distributions will be net of applicable expenses. There is no
assurance that any actual distributions will be made since all dividends
received may be used to pay expenses. In addition, excess amounts from the
Capital Account of a trust, if any, will be distributed at least annually to
the unitholders then of record. Proceeds received from the disposition of any
of the securities after a record date and prior to the following distribution
date will be held in the Capital Account and not distributed until the next
distribution date applicable to the Capital Account. The trustee shall be
required to make a distribution from the Capital Account if the cash balance on
deposit therein available for distribution shall be sufficient to distribute at
least $1.00 per 100 units. The trustee is not required to pay interest on funds
held in the Capital or Income Accounts (but may itself earn interest thereon
and therefore benefits from the use of such funds). The trustee is authorized
to reinvest any funds held in the Capital or Income Accounts, pending
distribution, in U.S. Treasury obligations which mature on or before the next
applicable distribution date. Any obligations so acquired must be held until
they mature and proceeds therefrom may not be reinvested.

     The distribution to the unitholders as of each record date will be made on
the following distribution date or shortly thereafter and shall consist of an
amount substantially equal to such portion of the unitholders' pro rata share of
the dividend distributions then held in the Income Account after deducting
estimated expenses. Because dividends are not received by a trust at a constant
rate throughout the year, such distributions to unitholders are expected to
fluctuate. However, if the trust uses Income Averaging, the trust prorates the
income distribution on an annual basis and annual income distributions are
expected to vary from year to year. If the amount on deposit in the Income
Account is insufficient for payment of the amount of income to be distributed on
a monthly basis, the trustee shall advance out of its own funds and cause to be
deposited in and credited to such Income Account such amount as may be required
to permit payment of the monthly income distribution. The trustee shall be
entitled to be reimbursed by the trust, without interest, out of income received
by the trust subsequent to the date of such advance and subject to the condition
that any such reimbursement shall be made only if it will not reduce the funds
in or available for the Income Account to an amount less than required for the
next ensuing distribution. Persons who purchase units will commence receiving
distributions only after such person becomes a record owner. A person will
become the owner of units, and thereby a unitholder of record, on the date of
settlement provided payment has been received. Notification to the trustee of
the transfer of units is the responsibility of the purchaser, but in the normal
course of business such notice is provided by the selling broker-dealer.

     The trustee will periodically deduct from the Income Account of a trust
and, to the extent funds are not sufficient therein, from the Capital Account
of a trust amounts necessary to pay the expenses of a trust. The trustee also
may withdraw from said accounts such amounts, if any, as it deems necessary to
establish a reserve for any governmental charges payable out of a trust.
Amounts so withdrawn shall not be considered a part of a trust's assets until
such time as the trustee shall return all or any part of such amounts to the
appropriate accounts. In addition, the trustee may withdraw from the Income and
Capital Accounts of a trust such amounts as may be necessary to cover
redemptions of units.

     Distribution Reinvestment. Unitholders may elect to have distributions of
capital (including capital gains) or dividends, if any, or both automatically
invested into additional units of their trust without a sales fee.

     Your trust will pay any deferred sales fee per unit regardless of any
sales fee discounts. However, if you elect to have distributions on your units
reinvested into additional units of your trust, you will be credited the amount
of any remaining deferred sales charge on such additional units at the time of
reinvestment.

     Unitholders who are receiving distributions in cash may elect to
participate in distribution reinvestment by filing with the Program Agent an
election to have such distributions reinvested without charge. Such election
must be received by the Program Agent at least ten days prior to the record
date applicable to any distribution in order to be in effect for such record
date. Any such election shall remain in effect until a subsequent notice is
received by the Program Agent.

     The Program Agent is The Bank of New York Mellon. All inquiries concerning
participating in distribution reinvestment should be directed to The Bank of
New York Mellon at its Unit Investment Trust Division office.

     Statements to Unitholders. With each distribution, the trustee will
furnish to each registered holder a statement of the amount of income and the
amount of other receipts, if any, which are being distributed, expressed in
each case as a dollar amount per unit.

     The accounts of a trust will not be audited annually unless the sponsor
determines that such an audit would be in the best interest of the unitholders
of the trust. If an audit is conducted, it will be done at the related trust's
expense, by independent public accountants designated by the sponsor. The
accountants' report will be furnished by the trustee to any unitholder upon
written request. Within a reasonable period of time after the end of each
calendar year, the trustee shall furnish to each person who at any time during
the calendar year was a unitholder of a trust a statement, covering the calendar
year, generally setting forth for the trust:

     (A)  As to the Income Account:

          (1)  Income received;

          (2)  Deductions for applicable taxes and for fees and expenses of the
               trust and for redemptions of units, if any; and

          (3)  The balance remaining after such distributions and deductions,
               expressed in each case both as a total dollar amount and as a
               dollar amount representing the pro rata share of each unit
               outstanding on the last business day of such calendar year; and

     (B)  As to the Capital Account:

          (1)  The dates of disposition of any securities and the net proceeds
               received therefrom;

          (2)  Deductions for payment of applicable taxes and fees and expenses
               of the trust; and

          (3)  The balance remaining after such distributions and deductions
               expressed both as a total dollar amount and as a dollar amount
               representing the pro rata share of each unit outstanding on the
               last business day of such calendar year; and

     (C)  The following information:

          (1)  A list of the securities as of the last business day of such
               calendar year;

          (2)  The number of units outstanding on the last business day of such
               calendar year;

          (3)  The redemption price based on the last evaluation made during
               such calendar year; and

          (4)  The amount actually distributed during such calendar year from
               the Income and Capital Accounts separately stated, expressed both
               as total dollar amounts and as dollar amounts per unit
               outstanding on the record dates for each such distribution.

     Rights of Unitholders. A unitholder may at any time tender units to the
trustee for redemption. The death or incapacity of any unitholder will not
operate to terminate a trust nor entitle legal representatives or heirs to
claim an accounting or to bring any action or proceeding in any court for
partition or winding up of a trust. No unitholder shall have the right to
control the operation and management of a trust in any manner, except to vote
with respect to the amendment of the trust agreement or termination of a
trust.

     Amendment and Termination. The trust agreement may be amended by the
trustee and the sponsor without the consent of any of the unitholders: (i) to
cure any ambiguity or to correct or supplement any provision which may be
defective or inconsistent; (ii) to change any provision thereof as may be
required by the Securities and Exchange Commission or any successor
governmental agency; (iii) to make such provisions as shall not materially
adversely affect the interests of the unitholders; or (iv) to make such other
amendments as may be necessary for a trust to qualify as a regulated investment
company, in the case of a trust which has elected to qualify as such. The trust
agreement with respect to any trust may also be amended in any respect by the
sponsor and the trustee, or any of the provisions thereof may be waived, with
the consent of the holders of units representing 66 2/3% of the units then
outstanding of the trust, provided that no such amendment or waiver will reduce
the interest of any unitholder thereof without the consent of such unitholder
or reduce the percentage of units required to consent to any such amendment or
waiver without the consent of all unitholders of the trust. In no event shall
the trust agreement be amended to increase the number of units of a trust
issuable thereunder, to permit the acquisition of any securities in addition to
or in substitution for those initially deposited in the trust or to adversely
affect the characterization of a trust as a regulated investment company for
federal income tax purposes, except in accordance with the provisions of the
trust agreement. The trustee shall promptly notify unitholders of the substance
of any such amendment.

     The trust agreement provides that a trust shall terminate upon the
liquidation, redemption or other disposition of the last of the securities held
in the trust but in no event is it to continue beyond the mandatory termination
date set forth in Part A of the prospectus. If the value of a trust shall be
less than the applicable minimum value stated in the prospectus, the trustee
may, in its discretion, and shall, when so directed by the sponsor, terminate
the trust. A trust may be terminated at any time by the holders of units
representing 66 2/3% of the units thereof then outstanding. In addition, the
sponsor may terminate a trust if it is based on a security index and the index
is no longer maintained.

     Beginning nine business days prior to, but no later than, the mandatory
termination date described in the prospectus, the trustee may begin to sell all
of the remaining underlying securities on behalf of unitholders in connection
with the termination of the trust. The sponsor may assist the trustee in these
sales and receive compensation to the extent permitted by applicable law. The
sale proceeds will be net of any incidental expenses involved in the sales.

     The trustee will attempt to sell the securities as quickly as it can
during the termination proceedings without, in its judgment, materially
adversely affecting the market price of the securities, but it is expected that
all of the securities will in any event be disposed of within a reasonable time
after a trust's termination. The sponsor does not anticipate that the period
will be longer than one month, and it could be as short as one day, depending
on the liquidity of the securities being sold. The liquidity of any security
depends on the daily trading volume of the security and the amount that the
sponsor has available for sale on any particular day. Of course, no assurances
can be given that the market value of the securities will not be adversely
affected during the termination proceedings.

     Within a reasonable period after termination, the trustee will sell any
securities remaining in a trust and, after paying all expenses and charges
incurred by the trust, will distribute to unitholders thereof their pro rata
share of the balances remaining in the Income and Capital Accounts of the
trust.

     The sponsor currently intends, but is not obligated, to offer for sale
units of a subsequent series of certain trusts at approximately one year after
the inception date of such trusts. If the sponsor does offer such units for
sale, unitholders may be given the opportunity to purchase such units at a
public offering price. There is, however, no assurance that units of any new
series of a trust will be offered for sale at that time, or if offered, that
there will be sufficient units available for sale to meet the requests of any
or all unitholders.

     The Trustee. The trustee is The Bank of New York Mellon, a trust company
organized under the laws of New York. The Bank of New York Mellon has its Unit
Investment Trust Division offices at 2 Hanson Place, 12th Fl., Brooklyn, New
York 11217, telephone 1-800-701-8178. The Bank of New York Mellon is subject to
supervision and examination by the Superintendent of Banks of the State of New
York and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, and its deposits
are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to the extent
permitted by law.

     The trustee, whose duties are ministerial in nature, has not participated
in selecting the portfolio of any trust. In accordance with the trust
agreement, the trustee shall keep records of all transactions at its office.
Such records shall include the name and address of, and the number of units
held by, every unitholder of a trust. Such books and records shall be open to
inspection by any unitholder at all reasonable times during usual business
hours. The trustee shall make such annual or other reports as may from time to
time be required under any applicable state or federal statute, rule or
regulation. The trustee shall keep a certified copy or duplicate original of
the trust agreement on file in its office available for inspection at all
reasonable times during usual business hours by any unitholder, together with a
current list of the securities held in each trust. Pursuant to the trust
agreement, the trustee may employ one or more agents for the purpose of custody
and safeguarding of securities comprising a trust.

     Under the trust agreement, the trustee or any successor trustee may resign
and be discharged of a trust created by the trust agreement by executing an
instrument in writing and filing the same with the sponsor. The trustee or
successor trustee must mail a copy of the notice of resignation to all
unitholders then of record, not less than sixty days before the date specified
in such notice when such resignation is to take effect. The sponsor upon
receiving notice of such resignation is obligated to appoint a successor
trustee promptly. If, upon such resignation, no successor trustee has been
appointed and has accepted the appointment within thirty days after
notification, the retiring trustee may apply to a court of competent
jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor. The sponsor may at any time
remove the trustee, with or without cause, and appoint a successor trustee as
provided in the trust agreement. Notice of such removal and appointment shall
be mailed to each unitholder by the sponsor. Upon execution of a written
acceptance of such appointment by such successor trustee, all the rights,
powers, duties and obligations of the original trustee shall vest in the
successor. The trustee must be a corporation organized under the laws of the
United States, or any state thereof, be authorized under such laws to exercise
trust powers and have at all times an aggregate capital, surplus and undivided
profits of not less than $5,000,000.

     The Sponsor. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC specializes in the
creation, development and distribution of investment solutions for advisors and
their valued clients. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC was created as Ranson &
Associates, Inc. in 1995 and is the successor sponsor to unit investment trusts
formerly sponsored by EVEREN Unit Investment Trusts, a service of EVEREN
Securities, Inc. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC is also the sponsor and
successor sponsor of Series of Ranson Unit Investment Trusts and The Kansas
Tax-Exempt Trust and Multi-State Series of The Ranson Municipal Trust. On
October 29, 2001, Ranson & Associates, Inc. was acquired by Claymore Group LLC.
The sale to Claymore Group LLC was financed by a loan from The Bank of New York
Mellon, the trustee. In November 2001, the sponsor changed its name from Ranson
& Associates, Inc. to Claymore Securities, Inc. On October 14, 2009, Guggenheim
Partners, LLC acquired Claymore Securities, Inc. Since the finalization of the
acquisition, Claymore Securities, Inc. has been operating as a subsidiary of
Guggenheim Partners, LLC. On September 27, 2010, Claymore Securities, Inc.
officially changed its name to Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC.

     Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC has been active in public and corporate
finance, has underwritten closed-end funds and has sold bonds, mutual funds,
closed-end funds, exchange-traded funds, structured products and unit
investment trusts and maintained secondary market activities relating thereto.
At present, Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC which is a member of the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), is the sponsor to each of the
above-named unit investment trusts. The sponsor's office is located at 227 W.
Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606.

     If at any time the sponsor shall fail to perform any of its duties under
the trust agreement or shall become incapable of acting or shall be adjudged a
bankrupt or insolvent or shall have its affairs taken over by public
authorities, then the trustee may (i) appoint a successor sponsor at rates of
compensation deemed by the trustee to be reasonable and not exceeding such
reasonable amounts as may be prescribed by the Securities and Exchange
Commission; (ii) terminate the trust agreement and liquidate any trust as
provided therein; or (iii) continue to act as trustee without terminating the
trust agreement.

     The Supervisor and the Evaluator. Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC, the
sponsor, also serves as evaluator and supervisor. The evaluator and supervisor
may resign or be removed by the trustee in which event the trustee is to use
its best efforts to appoint a satisfactory successor. Such resignation or
removal shall become effective upon acceptance of appointment by the successor
evaluator. If upon resignation of the evaluator no successor has accepted
appointment within thirty days after notice of resignation, the evaluator may
apply to a court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor.
Notice of such registration or removal and appointment shall be mailed by the
trustee to each unitholder. As evaluator, Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC
utilizes the trustee to perform certain evaluation services.

     Limitations on Liability. The sponsor is liable for the performance of its
obligations arising from its responsibilities under the trust agreement, but
will be under no liability to the unitholders for taking any action or
refraining from any action in good faith pursuant to the trust agreement or for
errors in judgment, except in cases of its own gross negligence, bad faith or
willful misconduct or its reckless disregard for its duties thereunder. The
sponsor shall not be liable or responsible in any way for depreciation or loss
incurred by reason of the sale of any securities.

     The trust agreement provides that the trustee shall be under no liability
for any action taken in good faith in reliance upon prima facie properly
executed documents or for the disposition of moneys, securities or certificates
except by reason of its own gross negligence, bad faith or willful misconduct,
or its reckless disregard for its duties under the trust agreement, nor shall
the trustee be liable or responsible in any way for depreciation or loss
incurred by reason of the sale by the trustee of any securities. In the event
that the sponsor shall fail to act, the trustee may act and shall not be liable
for any such action taken by it in good faith. The trustee shall not be
personally liable for any taxes or other governmental charges imposed upon or in
respect of the securities or upon the interest thereof. In addition, the trust
agreement contains other customary provisions limiting the liability of the
trustee.

     The unitholders may rely on any evaluation furnished by the evaluator and
shall have no responsibility for the accuracy thereof. The trust agreement
provides that the determinations made by the evaluator shall be made in good
faith upon the basis of the best information available to it, provided,
however, that the evaluator shall be under no liability to the trustee or
unitholders for errors in judgment, but shall be liable for its gross
negligence, bad faith or willful misconduct or its reckless disregard for its
obligations under the trust agreement.

Expenses of the Trust

     The sponsor does not charge a trust an annual advisory fee. The sponsor
will receive a portion of the sale commissions paid in connection with the
purchase of units and will share in profits, if any, related to the deposit of
securities in the trust. The sponsor and/or its affiliates do, also, receive an
annual fee as set forth in Part A of the prospectus for maintaining
surveillance over the portfolio and for performing certain administrative
services for the trust (the "Sponsor's Supervisory Fee"). In providing such
supervisory services, the sponsor may purchase research from a variety of
sources, which may include dealers of the trusts. If so provided in Part A of
the prospectus, the sponsor may also receive an annual fee for providing
bookkeeping and administrative services for a trust (the "Bookkeeping and
Administrative Fee"). Such services may include, but are not limited to, the
preparation of various materials for unitholders and providing account
information to the unitholders. If so provided in Part A of the prospectus, the
evaluator may also receive an annual fee for performing evaluation services for
the trusts (the "Evaluator's Fee"). In addition, if so provided in Part A of
the prospectus, a trust may be charged an annual licensing fee to cover
licenses for the use of service marks, trademarks, trade names and intellectual
property rights and/or for the use of databases and research. The trust will
bear all operating expenses. Estimated annual trust operating expenses are as
set forth in Part A of the prospectus; if actual expenses are higher than the
estimate, the excess will be borne by the trust. The estimated expenses include
listing fees but do not include the brokerage commissions and other
transactional fees payable by the trust in purchasing and selling securities.

     The trustee receives for its services that fee set forth in Part A of the
prospectus. The trustee's fee, which is paid monthly, is based on the largest
number of units of a trust outstanding at any time during the primary offering
period. After the primary offering period, the fee shall accrue daily and be
based on the number of units outstanding on the first business day of each
calendar year in which the fee is calculated or the number of units outstanding
at the end of the primary offering period, as appropriate. The Sponsor's
Supervisory Fee, the Bookkeeping and Administrative Fee and the Evaluator's Fee
are paid monthly and are based on the largest number of units of a trust
outstanding at any time during the primary offering period. After the primary
offering period, these fees shall accrue daily and be based on the number of
units outstanding on the first business day of each calendar year in which a fee
is calculated or the number of units outstanding at the end of the primary
offering period, as appropriate. The trustee benefits to the extent there are
funds for future distributions, payment of expenses and redemptions in the
Capital and Income Accounts since these Accounts are non-interest bearing and
the amounts earned by the trustee are retained by the trustee. Part of the
trustee's compensation for its services to a trust is expected to result from
the use of these funds. In addition, the Sponsor's Supervisory Fee, Bookkeeping
and Administrative Fee, Evaluator's Fee and the Trustee's Fee may be adjusted in
accordance with the cumulative percentage increase of the United States
Department of Labor's Consumer Price Index entitled "All Services Less Rent"
since the establishment of the trust. In addition, with respect to any fees
payable to the sponsor or an affiliate of the sponsor for providing bookkeeping
and other administrative services, supervisory services and evaluation services,
such individual fees may exceed the actual costs of providing such services for
a trust, but at no time will the total amount received for such services, in the
aggregate, rendered to all unit investment trusts of which Guggenheim Funds
Distributors, LLC is the sponsor in any calendar year exceed the actual cost to
the sponsor or its affiliates of supplying such services, in the aggregate, in
such year. In addition, the trustee may reimburse the sponsor out of its own
assets for services performed by employees of the sponsor in connection with the
operation of your trust.

     The trust will also pay a fee to the sponsor for creating and developing
the trust, including determining the trust's objective, policies, composition
and size, selecting service providers and information services, and for
providing other similar administrative and ministerial functions. Your trust
pays this "creation and development fee" as a fixed dollar amount at the close
of the initial offering period. The sponsor does not use the fee to pay
distribution expenses or as compensation for sales efforts.

     The following additional charges are or may be incurred by the trust: (i)
fees for the trustee's extraordinary services; (ii) expenses of the trustee
(including legal and auditing expenses, but not including any fees and expenses
charged by an agent for custody and safeguarding of securities) and of counsel,
if any; (iii) various governmental charges; (iv) expenses and costs of any
action taken by the trustee to protect the trust or the rights and interests of
the unitholders; (v) indemnification of the trustee for any loss, liability or
expense incurred by it in the administration of the trust not resulting from
gross negligence, bad faith or willful misconduct on its part; (vi)
indemnification of the sponsor for any loss, liability or expense incurred in
acting in that capacity without gross negligence, bad faith or willful
malfeasance or its reckless disregard for its obligations under the trust
agreement; (vii) any offering costs incurred after the end of the initial
offering period; and (viii) expenditures incurred in contacting unitholders
upon termination of the trust. The fees and expenses set forth herein are
payable out of a trust and, when owing to the trustee, are secured by a lien on
the trust. Since the securities are all stocks, and the income stream produced
by dividend payments, if any, is unpredictable, the sponsor cannot provide any
assurance that dividends will be sufficient to meet any or all expenses of a
trust. If the balances in the Income and Capital Accounts are insufficient to
provide for amounts payable by the trust, the trustee has the power to sell
securities to pay such amounts. These sales may result in capital gains or
losses to unitholders. It is expected that the income stream produced by
dividend payments may be insufficient to meet the expenses of a trust and,
accordingly, it is expected that securities will be sold to pay all of the fees
and expenses of the trust.

     The trust shall also bear the expenses associated with updating the
trust's registration statement and maintaining registration or qualification of
the units and/or a trust under federal or state securities laws subsequent to
initial registration. Such expenses shall include legal fees, accounting fees,
typesetting fees, electronic filing expenses and regulatory filing fees. The
expenses associated with updating registration statements have been
historically paid by a unit investment trust's sponsor.

Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage Allocation

     When a trust sells securities, the composition and diversity of the
securities in the trust may be altered. In order to obtain the best price for a
trust, it may be necessary for the supervisor to specify minimum amounts (such
as 100 shares) in which blocks of securities are to be sold. In effecting
purchases and sales of a trust's portfolio securities, the sponsor may direct
that orders be placed with and brokerage commissions be paid to brokers,
including brokers which may be affiliated with the trust, the sponsor or
dealers participating in the offering of units.

Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Units

     Public Offering Price. Units of a trust are offered at the public offering
price (which is based on the aggregate underlying value of the securities in
the trust and includes the initial sales fee, if applicable, plus a pro rata
share of any accumulated amounts in the accounts of the trust). The initial
sales fee is equal to the difference between the maximum sales fee and the sum
of the remaining deferred sales fee and the creation and development fee ("C&D
Fee"). The maximum sales fee is set forth in Part A of the prospectus. The
deferred sales fee and the C&D Fee will be collected as described in this
prospectus. Units purchased subsequent to the initial deferred sales fee
payment will be subject to the initial sales fee, the remaining deferred sales
fee payments and the C&D Fee. Units sold or redeemed prior to such time as the
entire applicable deferred sales fee has been collected will be assessed the
remaining deferred sales fee at the time of such sale or redemption. During the
initial offering period, a portion of the public offering price includes an
amount of securities to pay for all or a portion of the costs incurred in
establishing a trust ("organization costs"). These organization costs include
the cost of preparing the registration statement, the trust indenture and other
closing documents, registering units with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and states, the initial audit of the trust portfolio, legal fees,
fees paid to a portfolio consultant for assisting the sponsor in selecting the
trust's portfolio, and the initial fees and expenses of the trustee. These
costs will be deducted from a trust as of the end of the initial offering
period or after six months, at the discretion of the sponsor. As indicated
above, the initial public offering price of the units was established by
dividing the aggregate underlying value of the securities by the number of
units outstanding. Such price determination as of the opening of business on
the date a trust was created was made on the basis of an evaluation of the
securities in the trust prepared by the evaluator. After the opening of
business on this date, the evaluator will appraise or cause to be appraised
daily the value of the underlying securities as of the close of the New York
Stock Exchange on days the New York Stock Exchange is open and will adjust the
public offering price of the units commensurate with such valuation. Such
public offering price will be effective for all orders properly received at or
prior to the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange on each such day.
Orders received by the trustee, sponsor or any dealer for purchases, sales or
redemptions after that time, or on a day when the New York Stock Exchange is
closed, will be held until the next determination of price.

     The value of the securities is determined on each business day by the
evaluator based on the closing sale prices on a national securities exchange or
the NASDAQ National Market System or by taking into account the same factors
referred to under "Computation of Redemption Price."

     Public Distribution of Units. During the initial offering period, units of
a trust will be distributed to the public at the public offering price thereof.
Upon the completion of the initial offering, units which remain unsold or which
may be acquired in the secondary market may be offered at the public offering
price determined in the manner provided above.

     The sponsor intends to qualify units of a trust for sale in a number of
states. Units will be sold through dealers who are members of FINRA and through
others. Broker-dealers and others will be allowed a concession or agency
commission in connection with the distribution of units during the initial
offering period as set forth in the prospectus.

     The sponsor reserves the right to reject, in whole or in part, any order
for the purchase of units.

     Sponsor Profits. The sponsor will receive gross sales fees equal to the
percentage of the public offering price of the units of a trust described in
the prospectus. In addition, the sponsor may realize a profit (or sustain a
loss) as of the date a trust is created resulting from the difference between
the purchase prices of the securities to the sponsor and the cost of such
securities to the trust. Thereafter, on subsequent deposits the sponsor may
realize profits or sustain losses from such deposits. The sponsor may realize
additional profits or losses during the initial offering period on unsold units
as a result of changes in the daily market value of the securities in the
trust.

     Market for Units. After the initial offering period, the sponsor may
maintain a market for units of a trust offered hereby and continuously offer to
purchase said units at prices, determined by the evaluator, based on the value
of the underlying securities. Unitholders who wish to dispose of their units
should inquire of their broker as to current market prices in order to
determine whether there is in existence any price in excess of the redemption
price and, if so, the amount thereof. Unitholders who sell or redeem units
prior to such time as the entire deferred sales fee on such units has been
collected will be assessed the amount of the remaining deferred sales fee at
the time of such sale or redemption. The offering price of any units resold by
the sponsor will be in accord with that described in the currently effective
prospectus describing such units. Any profit or loss resulting from the resale
of such units will belong to the sponsor. If the sponsor decides to maintain a
secondary market, it may suspend or discontinue purchases of units of the trust
if the supply of units exceeds demand, or for other business reasons.

     Redemption. A unitholder who does not dispose of units in the secondary
market described above may cause units to be redeemed by the trustee by making
a written request to the trustee at its Unit Investment Trust Division office
in the city of New York. Unitholders must sign the request, and such transfer
instrument, exactly as their names appear on the records of the trustee. If the
amount of the redemption is $500 or less and the proceeds are payable to the
unitholder(s) of record at the address of record, no signature guarantee is
necessary for redemptions by individual account owners (including joint
owners). Additional documentation may be requested, and a signature guarantee
is always required, from corporations, executors, administrators, trustees,
guardians or associations. The signatures must be guaranteed by a participant
in the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program ("STAMP") or such other
signature guaranty program in addition to, or in substitution for, STAMP, as
may be accepted by the trustee.

     Redemption shall be made by the trustee no later than the second business
day following the day on which a tender for redemption is received (the
"Redemption Date") by payment of cash equivalent to the redemption price,
determined as set forth below under "Computation of Redemption Price," as of the
close of the New York Stock Exchange next following such tender, multiplied by
the number of units being redeemed. Any units redeemed shall be canceled and any
undivided fractional interest in the related trust extinguished. The price
received upon redemption might be more or less than the amount paid by the
unitholder depending on the value of the securities in the trust at the time of
redemption. Unitholders who sell or redeem units prior to such time as the
entire deferred sales fee on such units has been collected will be assessed the
amount of the remaining deferred sales fee at the time of such sale or
redemption. Certain broker-dealers may charge a transaction fee for processing
redemption requests.

     Under regulations issued by the Internal Revenue Service, the trustee is
required to withhold a specified percentage of the principal amount of a unit
redemption if the trustee has not been furnished the redeeming unitholder's tax
identification number in the manner required by such regulations. Any amount so
withheld is transmitted to the Internal Revenue Service and may be recovered by
the unitholder only when filing a tax return. Under normal circumstances the
trustee obtains the unitholder's tax identification number from the selling
broker. However, any time a unitholder elects to tender units for redemption,
such unitholder should make sure that the trustee has been provided a certified
tax identification number in order to avoid this possible "back-up
withholding." In the event the trustee has not been previously provided such
number, one must be provided at the time redemption is requested. Any amounts
paid on redemption representing unpaid dividends shall be withdrawn from the
Income Account of a trust to the extent that funds are available for such
purpose. All other amounts paid on redemption shall be withdrawn from the
Capital Account for a trust.

     Unitholders tendering units for redemption may request an in-kind
distribution (a "Distribution In Kind") from the trustee in lieu of cash
redemption. A unitholder may request a Distribution In Kind of an amount and
value of securities per unit equal to the redemption price per unit as
determined as of the evaluation time next following the tender, provided that
the tendering unitholder is (i) entitled to receive at least $25,000 of
proceeds as part of his or her distribution or if he paid at least $25,000 to
acquire the units being tendered; and (ii) the unitholder has elected to redeem
at least thirty business days prior to the termination of the trust. If the
unitholder meets these requirements, a Distribution In Kind will be made by the
trustee through the distribution of each of the securities of the trust in book
entry form to the account of the unitholder's bank or broker-dealer at
Depository Trust Company. The tendering unitholder shall be entitled to receive
whole shares of each of the securities comprising the portfolio of the trust
and cash from the Capital Account equal to the fractional shares to which the
tendering unitholder is entitled. The trustee shall make any adjustments
necessary to reflect differences between the redemption price of the units and
the value of the securities distributed in kind as of the date of tender. If
funds in the Capital Account are insufficient to cover the required cash
distribution to the tendering unitholder, the trustee may sell securities. The
in-kind redemption option may be terminated by the sponsor at any time. The
trustee is empowered to sell securities in order to make funds available for
the redemption of units. To the extent that securities are sold or redeemed in
kind, the size of a trust will be, and the diversity of a trust may be, reduced
but each remaining unit will continue to represent approximately the same
proportional interest in each security. Sales may be required at a time when
securities would not otherwise be sold and may result in lower prices than
might otherwise be realized. The price received upon redemption may be more or
less than the amount paid by the unitholder depending on the value of the
securities in the portfolio at the time of redemption.

     Unitholders of a trust that holds closed-end funds or other investment
company securities who request a Distribution In Kind will be subject to any
12b-1 Fees or other service or distribution fees applicable to the underlying
securities.

     The right of redemption may be suspended and payment postponed for more
than two business days following the day on which tender for redemption is made
(i) for any period during which the New York Stock Exchange is closed, other
than customary weekend and holiday closings, or during which (as determined by
the Securities and Exchange Commission) trading on the New York Stock Exchange
is restricted; (ii) for any period during which an emergency exists as a result
of which disposal by the trustee of securities is not reasonably practicable or
it is not reasonably practicable to fairly determine the value of the
underlying securities in accordance with the trust agreement; or (iii) for such
other period as the Securities and Exchange Commission may by order permit. The
trustee is not liable to any person in any way for any loss or damage which may
result from any such suspension or postponement.

     Computation of Redemption Price. The redemption price per unit (as well as
the secondary market public offering price) will generally be determined on the
basis of the last sale price of the securities in a trust. The redemption price
per unit is the pro rata share of each unit in a trust determined generally on
the basis of (i) the cash on hand in the trust or moneys in the process of
being collected; and (ii) the value of the securities in the trust less (a)
amounts representing taxes or other governmental charges payable out of the
trust, (b) any amount owing to the trustee for its advances and (c) the accrued
expenses or remaining deferred sales fees of the trust. During the initial
offering period, the redemption price and the secondary market repurchase price
will also include estimated organizational costs. The evaluator may determine
the value of the securities in the trust in the following manner: if the
securities are listed on a national or foreign securities exchange or the
NASDAQ National Market System, such evaluation shall generally be based on the
last available sale price on or immediately prior to the Evaluation Time on the
exchange or NASDAQ National Market System which is the principal market
therefor, which shall be deemed to be the New York Stock Exchange if the
securities are listed thereon (unless the evaluator deems such price
inappropriate as a basis for evaluation) or, if there is no such available sale
price on such exchange, at the last available bid prices (offer prices for
primary market purchases) of the securities. Securities not listed on the New
York Stock Exchange but principally traded on the NASDAQ National Market System
will be valued at the NASDAQ National Market System's official closing price.
If the securities are not so listed or, if so listed, the principal market
therefor is other than on such exchange or there is no such available sale
price on such exchange, such evaluation shall generally be based on the
following methods or any combination thereof whichever the evaluator deems
appropriate: (i) on the basis of the current bid price (offer prices for
primary market purchases) for comparable securities (unless the evaluator deems
such price inappropriate as a basis for evaluation); (ii) by determining the
valuation of the securities on the bid side (offer side for primary market
purchases) of the market by appraisal; or (iii) by any combination of the
above. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the evaluator or its designee, will
generally value foreign securities primarily traded on foreign exchanges at
their fair value which may be other than their market price. If the trust holds
securities denominated in a currency other than U.S. dollars, the evaluation of
such security is based upon U.S. dollars based on current bid side (offer side
for primary market purchases) exchange rates (unless the evaluator deems such
prices inappropriate as a basis for valuation).

     Retirement Plans. A trust may be well suited for purchase by Individual
Retirement Accounts, Keogh Plans, pension funds and other qualified retirement
plans. Generally, capital gains and income received under each of the foregoing
plans are deferred from federal taxation. All distributions from such plans are
generally treated as ordinary income but may, in some cases, be eligible for
special income averaging or tax deferred rollover treatment. Investors
considering participation in any such plan should review specific tax laws
related thereto and should consult their attorneys or tax advisers with respect
to the establishment and maintenance of any such plan. Such plans are offered by
brokerage firms and other financial institutions. The trust will lower the
minimum investment requirement for IRA accounts to 1 unit. Fees and charges with
respect to such plans may vary.

     Ownership of Units. Ownership of units will not be evidenced by
certificates. All evidence of ownership of units will be recorded in book entry
form at Depository Trust Company ("DTC") through an investor's brokers'
account. Units held through DTC will be registered in the nominee name of Cede
& Co. Individual purchases of beneficial ownership interest in the trust will
be made in book entry form through DTC. Ownership and transfer of units will be
evidenced and accomplished by book entries made by DTC and its participants.
DTC will record ownership and transfer of the units among DTC participants and
forward all notices and credit all payments received in respect of the units
held by the DTC participants. Beneficial owners of units will receive written
confirmation of their purchases and sale from the broker dealer or bank from
whom their purchase was made. Units are transferable by making a written
request properly accompanied by a written instrument or instruments of transfer
which should be sent registered or certified mail for the protection of the
unitholder. Record holders must sign such written request exactly as their
names appear on the records of the trust. The signatures must be guaranteed by
a participant in the STAMP or such other signature guaranty program in addition
to, or in substitution for, STAMP, as may be acceptable by the trustee.

     Units may be purchased in denominations of one unit or any multiple
thereof, subject to the minimum investment requirement. Fractions of units, if
any, will be computed to three decimal places.

Taxes

     This section summarizes some of the main U.S. federal income tax
consequences of owning units of the trust. This section is current as of the
date of this prospectus. Tax laws and interpretations change frequently, and
these summaries do not describe all of the tax consequences to all taxpayers.
For example, these summaries generally do not describe your situation if you
are a corporation, a non-U.S. person, a broker/dealer, or other investor with
special circumstances. In addition, this section does not describe your state,
local or foreign tax consequences.

     This federal income tax summary is based in part on the advice of counsel
to the sponsor. The Internal Revenue Service could disagree with any
conclusions set forth in this section. In addition, our counsel was not asked
to review, and has not reached a conclusion with respect to the federal income
tax treatment of the assets to be deposited in your trust. This may not be
sufficient for you to use for the purpose of avoiding penalties under federal
tax law.

     As with any investment, you should seek advice based on your individual
circumstances from your own tax advisor.

     Trust Status. Your trust intends to qualify as a "regulated investment
company" under the federal tax laws. If your trust qualifies as a regulated
investment company and distributes its income as required by the tax law, the
trust generally will not pay federal income taxes. An adverse federal income
tax audit of a partnership that the trust invests in could result in the trust
being required to pay federal income tax or pay a deficiency dividend (without
having received additional cash).

     Distributions. Trust distributions are generally taxable. After the end of
each year, you will receive a tax statement that separates your trust's
distributions into two categories, ordinary income distributions and capital
gain dividends. Ordinary income distributions are generally taxed at your
ordinary tax rate, however, as further discussed below, certain ordinary income
distributions received from the trust may be taxed at the capital gains tax
rates. Some portion of the ordinary income distributions that are attributable
to dividends received by the trust from shares in certain real estate
investment trusts may be designated by the trust as eligible for a deduction
for qualified business income, provided certain holding period requirements are
satisfied. Generally, you will treat all capital gain dividends as long-term
capital gains regardless of how long you have owned your units. To determine
your actual tax liability for your capital gain dividends, you must calculate
your total net capital gain or loss for the tax year after considering all of
your other taxable transactions, as described below. In addition, your trust
may make distributions that represent a return of capital for tax purposes and
thus will generally not be immediately taxable to you. The tax status of your
distributions from your trust is not affected by whether you reinvest your
distributions in additional units or receive them in cash. The income from your
trust that you must take into account for federal income tax purposes is not
reduced by amounts used to pay a deferred sales fee, if any. The tax laws may
require you to treat distributions made to you in January as if you had
received them on December 31 of the previous year. Income from a trust may also
be subject to a 3.8% "Medicare tax." This tax generally applies to your net
investment income if your adjusted gross income exceeds certain threshold
amounts, which are $250,000 in the case of married couples filing joint returns
and $200,000 in the case of single individuals.

     Dividends Received Deduction. A corporation that owns units generally will
not be entitled to the dividends received deduction with respect to many
dividends received from the trust because the dividends received deduction is
generally not available for distributions from regulated investment companies.
However, certain ordinary income dividends on units that are attributable to
qualifying dividends received by the trust from certain corporations may be
reported by the trust as being eligible for the dividends received deduction.

     Sale or Redemption of Units. If you sell or redeem your units, you will
generally recognize a taxable gain or loss. To determine the amount of this
gain or loss, you must subtract your tax basis in your units from the amount
you receive in the transaction. Your tax basis in your units is generally equal
to the cost of your units, generally including sales charges. In some cases,
however, you may have to adjust your tax basis after you purchase your units.

     Capital Gains and Losses and Certain Ordinary Income Dividends. If you are
an individual, the maximum marginal stated federal tax rate for net capital gain
is generally 20% (15% or 0% for taxpayers with taxable incomes below certain
thresholds). Some portion of your capital gain dividends may be attributable to
the trust's interest in a master limited partnership which may be subject to a
maximum marginal stated federal income tax rate of 28%, rather than the rates
set forth above. In addition, capital gain received from assets held for more
than one year that is considered "unrecaptured section 1250 gain" (which may be
the case, for example, with some capital gains attributable to the REITs
included in the trust) is taxed at a maximum stated tax rate of 25%. In the case
of capital gain dividends, the determination of which portion of the capital
gain dividend, if any, is subject to the 25% or 28% tax rate, will be made based
on rules prescribed by the United States Treasury. Capital gains may also be
subject to the "Medicare tax" described above.

     Net capital gain equals net long-term capital gain minus net short-term
capital loss for the taxable year. Capital gain or loss is long-term if the
holding period for the asset is more than one year and is short-term if the
holding period for the asset is one year or less. You must exclude the date you
purchase your units to determine your holding period. However, if you receive a
capital gain dividend from your trust and sell your unit at a loss after
holding it for six months or less, the loss will be recharacterized as
long-term capital loss to the extent of the capital gain dividend received. The
tax rates for capital gains realized from assets held for one year or less are
generally the same as for ordinary income. The Internal Revenue Code treats
certain capital gains as ordinary income in special situations.

     Ordinary income dividends received by an individual unitholder from a
regulated investment company such as the trust are generally taxed at the same
rates that apply to net capital gain (as discussed above), provided certain
holding period requirements are satisfied and provided the dividends are
attributable to qualifying dividends received by the trust itself. Dividends
from REITs such as those held by the trust are qualifying dividends only in
limited circumstances. Your trust will provide notice to its unitholders of the
amount of any distribution which may be taken into account as a dividend which
is eligible for the capital gains tax rates.

     In-Kind Distributions. Under certain circumstances, as described in this
prospectus, you may receive an in-kind distribution of trust securities when
you redeem units or up to 30 business days before your trust terminates.
However, this ability to request an in-kind distribution will terminate at any
time that the number of outstanding units has been reduced to 10% or less of
the highest number of units issued by the trust. By electing to receive an
in-kind distribution, you will receive trust securities plus, possibly, cash.
This distribution will be treated as a sale for federal income tax purposes and
you will generally recognize gain or loss, generally based on the value at that
time of the securities and the amount of cash received. The Internal Revenue
Service could, however, assert that a loss could not be currently deducted.

     Treatment of Trust Expenses. Expenses incurred and deducted by your trust
will generally not be treated as income taxable to you. In some cases, however,
you may be required to treat your portion of these trust expenses as income.
You may not be able to deduct some or all of these expenses.

     Foreign Tax Credit. If your trust invests in any foreign securities, the
tax statement that you receive may include an item showing foreign taxes your
trust paid to other countries. In this case, dividends taxed to you will
include your share of the taxes your trust paid to other countries. You may be
able to deduct or receive a tax credit for your share of these taxes.

     Investments in Certain Foreign Corporations. If the trust holds an equity
interest in any "passive foreign investment companies" ("PFICs"), which are
generally certain foreign corporations that receive at least 75% of their
annual gross income from passive sources (such as interest, dividends, certain
rents and royalties or capital gains) or that hold at least 50% of their assets
in investments producing such passive income, the trust could be subject to
U.S. federal income tax and additional interest charges on gains and certain
distributions with respect to those equity interests, even if all the income or
gain is timely distributed to its Unitholders. The trust will not be able to
pass through to its Unitholders any credit or deduction for such taxes. The
trust may be able to make an election that could ameliorate these adverse tax
consequences. In this case, the trust would recognize as ordinary income any
increase in the value of such PFIC shares, and as ordinary loss any decrease in
such value to the extent it did not exceed prior increases included in income.
Under this election, the trust might be required to recognize in a year income
in excess of its distributions from PFICs and its proceeds from dispositions of
PFIC stock during that year, and such income would nevertheless be subject to
the distribution requirement and would be taken into account for purposes of
the 4% excise tax. Dividends paid by PFICs are not treated as qualified
dividend income.

     Foreign Investors. If you are a foreign investor (i.e., an investor other
than a U.S. citizen or resident or a U.S. corporation, partnership, estate or
trust), you should be aware that, generally, subject to applicable tax
treaties, distributions from your trust will be characterized as dividends for
federal income tax purposes (other than dividends which the trust properly
reports as capital gain dividends) and will be subject to U.S. income taxes,
including withholding taxes, subject to certain exceptions described below.
However, distributions received by a foreign investor from your trust that are
properly reported by the trust as capital gain dividends may not be subject to
U.S. federal income taxes, including withholding taxes, provided that the trust
makes certain elections and certain other conditions are met. Distributions
from the trust that are properly reported by the trust as an interest-related
dividend attributable to certain interest income received by the trust or as a
short-term capital gain dividend attributable to certain net short-term capital
gain income received by the trust may not be subject to U.S. federal income
taxes, including withholding taxes when received by certain foreign investors,
provided that the trust makes certain elections and certain other conditions
are met. Distributions to, and the gross proceeds from dispositions of units
by, (i) certain non-U.S. financial institutions that have not entered into an
agreement with the U.S. Treasury to collect and disclose certain information
and are not resident in a jurisdiction that has entered into such an agreement
with the U.S. Treasury and (ii) certain other non-U.S. entities that do not
provide certain certifications and information about the entity's U.S. owners,
may be subject to a U.S. withholding tax of 30%. However, proposed regulations
may eliminate the requirement to withhold on payments of gross proceeds from
dispositions.

Experts

     Legal Matters. Chapman and Cutler LLP, 111 West Monroe Street, Chicago,
Illinois 60603, acts as counsel for the trust and has passed upon the legality
of the units.

     Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm. The statement of financial
condition, including the Trust Portfolio, appearing herein, has been audited by
Grant Thornton LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, as set
forth in their report thereon appearing elsewhere herein, and is included in
reliance on such report given on the authority of such firm as experts in
accounting and auditing.

                         GUGGENHEIM DEFINED PORTFOLIOS
                     GUGGENHEIM PORTFOLIO PROSPECTUS-PART B
                                 ________, 2020

Where to Learn More
You can contact us for free information about this and other investments.

Visit us on the Internet
http://www.guggenheiminvestments.com

Call Guggenheim Funds
(800) 345-7999
Pricing Line (888) 248-4954

Call The Bank of New York Mellon
(800) 701-8178 (investors)
(800) 647-3383 (brokers)

Additional Information

     This prospectus does not contain all information filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission. To obtain a copy of this information (a duplication fee
may be required):

E mail: publicinfo@sec.gov
Write:  Public Reference Room
        Washington, D.C. 20549-0102
Visit:  http://www.sec.gov (EDGAR Database)
Call:   1-202-942-8090 (only for information on the operation of the Public
        Reference Room)

     When units of the trust are no longer available, we may use this
prospectus as a preliminary prospectus for a future trust. In this case you
should note that:

     The information in this prospectus is not complete with respect to future
trusts and may be changed. No one may sell units of a future trust until a
registration statement is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
is effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell units and is not
soliciting an offer to buy units in any state where the offer or sale is not
permitted.


Contents

Investment Summary

A concise     2    Overview
description   2    Investment Objective
of essential  2    Principal Investment Strategy
information   2    Security Selection
about the     4    Future Trusts
portfolio     4    Essential Information
              4    Portfolio Diversification
              5    Principal Risks
              9    Who Should Invest
             10    Fees and Expenses
             11    Example
             12    Trust Portfolio

Understanding Your Investments

Detailed     16    How to Buy Units
information  20    How to Sell Your Units
to help you  21    Distributions
understand   22    Investment Risks
your         33    How the Trust Works
investment   34    General Information
             35    Expenses
             36    Report of Independent Registered Public
                     Accounting Firm
             37    Statement of Financial Condition

For the Table of Contents of Part B, see Part B of the prospectus.

Where to Learn More

You can contact us for Visit us on the Internet
free information about Guggenheiminvestments.com
these investments.     Call Guggenheim Investments
                       800 345 7999 / Pricing line 800 248 4954
                       Call The Bank of New York Mellon
                       800 701 8178 Investors / 800 647 3383 Brokers

Additional Information

This prospectus does not contain all information filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. To obtain or copy this information (a duplication fee may
be required):

E-mail:   publicinfo@sec.gov
Write:    Public Reference Room, Washington, D.C. 20549-0102
Visit:    sec.gov (EDGAR Database)

Call:     202 942 8090 (only for information on the operation
          of the Public Reference Room)

Refer to: Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989
          Securities Act file number: 333-______
          Investment Company Act file number: 811-03763

When units of the trust are no longer available, we may use this prospectus as
a preliminary prospectus for a future trust.

The information in this prospectus is not complete with respect to future
trusts and may be changed. No one may sell units of a future trust until a
registration statement is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
is effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell units and is not
soliciting an offer to buy units in any state where the offer or sale is not
permitted.

GUGGENHEIM LOGO

Unit Investment Trusts

__.__.2020

Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989 Prospectus

Total Income Portfolio, Series 20

GuggenheimInvestments.com


                          UNDERTAKING TO FILE REPORTS

     Subject to the terms and conditions of Section 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the undersigned registrant hereby undertakes to file with
the Securities and Exchange Commission such supplementary and periodic
information, documents, and reports as may be prescribed by any rule or
regulation of the Commission heretofore or hereafter duly adopted pursuant to
authority conferred in that section.

                       CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION STATEMENT

     A.   Bonding Arrangements of Depositor:

     The Depositor has obtained the following Securities Dealer Blanket Bond for
its officers, directors and employees:

                   INSURER/POLICY NO.                            AMOUNT

              National Union Fire Insurance
           Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
                         5692790                               $4,000,000

     This Registration Statement comprises the following papers and documents.

                 The Facing Sheet
                 The Prospectus
                 The Signatures
                 Consents of Counsel
                 Exhibits

     The following exhibits:

     1.1  Reference Trust Agreement (to be supplied by amendment).

   1.1.1  Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust (Reference is made to Exhibit
          1.1.1 to Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement on Form S-6 for
          Claymore Securities Defined Portfolios, Series 116 (File No.
          333-72828) filed on December 18, 2001).

     2.1  Code of Ethics (Reference is made to Exhibit 2.1 to the Registration
          Statement on Form S-6 for Claymore Securities Deferred Portfolios,
          Series 213 (File No. 333-122184) filed on February 9, 2005).

     3.1  Opinion of counsel as to legality of the securities being registered
          including a consent to the use of its name in the Registration
          Statement (to be supplied by amendment).

     3.2  Opinion of counsel as to the Trustee and the Trust(s), including a
          consent to the use of its name in the Registration Statement (to be
          supplied by amendment).

     4.1  Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (to be
          supplied by amendment).

     6.0  Powers of Attorney authoring Amy Lee to execute the Registration
          Statement. (Reference is made to Exhibit 6.0 to the Registration
          Statement on Form S-6 for Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1901
          (File No. 333-231024) filed on April 25, 2019).

                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant,
Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989 has duly caused this Registration
Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly
authorized, in the City of Chicago, and State of Illinois, on the 8th day of
January, 2020.

                          GUGGENHEIM DEFINED PORTFOLIOS, SERIES 1989, Registrant

                               By: GUGGENHEIM FUNDS DISTRIBUTORS, LLC, Depositor

                                                                 By: /s/ Amy Lee
                                                                 ---------------
                                                                         Amy Lee
                                                    Vice President and Secretary

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the date indicated:



                                                                           
     SIGNATURE*                          TITLE                                   DATE
                                                                             )
                                                                             )   By:    /s/ Amy Lee
                                                                             )          -----------
                                                                             )          Amy Lee
                                                                             )          Attorney-in-Fact*
                                                                             )
JERRY W. MILLER*                         Chief Executive Officer and         )          January 8, 2020
                                         President of Guggenheim Funds       )
                                         Distributors, LLC                   )
                                                                             )
DOMINICK COGLIANDRO*                     Chief Operating Officer of          )          January 8, 2020
                                         Guggenheim Funds Distributors,      )
                                         LLC                                 )
                                                                             )
JULIE JACQUES*                           Treasurer of Guggenheim Funds       )          January 8, 2020
                                         Distributors, LLC                   )
                                                                             )
JULIE JACQUES*                           Principal Financial Officer of      )          January 8, 2020
                                         Guggenheim Funds Distributors,      )
                                         LLC                                 )

FARHAN SHARAFF                           Chief Investment Officer of
                                         Guggenheim Funds Distributors,
                                         LLC

/s/ Amy Lee                              Vice President and Secretary of                January 8, 2020
-----------                              Guggenheim Funds Distributors,
AMY LEE                                  LLC


----------------------
*    Executed copies of the related powers of attorney were filed as Exhibit 6.0
     to the Registration Statement of Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1901
     on April 25, 2019.

            CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

     The consent of Grant Thornton LLP to the use of its report and to the
reference to such firm in the Prospectus included in the Registration Statement
will be filed as Exhibit 4.1 to the Registration Statement.

                       CONSENT OF CHAPMAN AND CUTLER LLP

     The consent of Chapman and Cutler LLP to the use of its name in the
Prospectus included in the Registration Statement will be contained in its
opinion to be filed as Exhibit 3.1 to the Registration Statement.

                        CONSENT OF DORSEY & WHITNEY LLP

     The consent of Dorsey & Whitney LLP to the use of its name in the
Prospectus included in the Registration Statement will be contained in its
opinion to be filed as Exhibit 3.2 to the Registration Statement.

                                   MEMORANDUM

                 Re: Guggenheim Defined Portfolios, Series 1989

     The list of securities comprising the trust of the fund, the evaluation,
record and distribution dates and other changes pertaining specifically to the
new series, such as size and number of units of the trust in the fund and the
statement of financial condition of the new fund will be filed by amendment.

                                    1940 ACT

                             FORMS N-8A AND N-8B-2

     Form N-8A and Form N-8B-2 were filed in respect of Guggenheim Defined
Portfolios, Series 718 (and subsequent series) (File No. 333-169214).

                                    1933 ACT

                                 THE INDENTURE

     The form of the proposed Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust is expected
to be in all respects consistent with the form of the Standard Terms and
Conditions of Trust dated December 18, 2001 relative to Claymore Securities
Defined Portfolios, Series 116.

                                                          CHAPMAN AND CUTLER LLP

Chicago, Illinois
January 8, 2020