Buy new:
$21.99$21.99
Arrives:
Monday, July 24
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy used: $19.99
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Investing Amid Low Expected Returns: Making the Most When Markets Offer the Least 1st Edition
| Price | New from | Used from |
- Kindle
$17.00 Read with Our Free App - Hardcover
$19.99 - $21.9917 Used from $11.88 23 New from $17.99
Explore your book, then jump right back to where you left off with Page Flip.
View high quality images that let you zoom in to take a closer look.
Enjoy features only possible in digital – start reading right away, carry your library with you, adjust the font, create shareable notes and highlights, and more.
Discover additional details about the events, people, and places in your book, with Wikipedia integration.
Purchase options and add-ons
Elevate your game in the face of challenging market conditions with this eye-opening guide to portfolio management
Investing Amid Low Expected Returns: Making the Most When Markets Offer the Least provides an evidence-based blueprint for successful investing when decades of market tailwinds are turning into headwinds.
For a generation, falling yields and soaring asset prices have boosted realized returns. However, this past windfall leaves retirement savers and investors now facing the prospect of record-low future expected returns. Emphasizing this pressing challenge, the book highlights the role that timeless investment practices – discipline, humility, and patience – will play in enabling investment success. It then assesses current investor practices and the body of empirical evidence to illuminate the building blocks for improving long-run returns in today’s environment and beyond. It concludes by reviewing how to put them together through effective portfolio construction, risk management, and cost control practices.
In this book, readers will also find:
- The common investor responses so far to the low expected return challenge
- Extensive empirical evidence on the critical ingredients of an effective portfolio: major asset class premia, illiquidity premia, style premia, and alpha
- Discussions of the pros and cons of illiquid investments, factor investing, ESG investing, risk mitigation strategies, and market timing
- Coverage of the whole top-down investment process – throughout the book endorsing humility in tactical forecasting and boldness in diversification
Ideal for institutional and active individual investors, Investing Amid Low Expected Returns is a timeless resource that enables investing with serenity even in harsher financial conditions.
- ISBN-101119860199
- ISBN-13978-1119860198
- Edition1st
- PublisherWiley
- Publication dateApril 12, 2022
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions7.3 x 1.5 x 10.3 inches
- Print length304 pages
Frequently bought together

More items to explore
Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies, University Edition (Wiley Finance)Tim KollerPaperback$20.95 shipping
Options as a Strategic Investment by Lawrence G. McMillan 5 edition (Textbook ONLY, Hardcover)Hardcover$22.43 shippingGet it as soon as Monday, Jul 24Only 2 left in stock - order soon.
Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
In Investing Amid Low Expected Returns: Making the Most When Markets Offer the Least, renowned institutional investor advisor Dr. Antti Ilmanen delivers a timeless―and timely―treatment of strategic investment processes in times of low returns.
The author outlines the low expected return challenge now facing investors due to the past four-decade stretch that has seen markets with ever-increasing valuations and realized returns with falling yields. Assuming high realized returns will persist, especially in an era of low starting yields, is therefore complacent.
The key building blocks to improving long-run returns―including major asset class premia, illiquidity premia, style premia, and the always elusive alpha―are discussed as well, with extensive empirical evidence used to bolster the book’s exploration of the most reliable sources of investment returns.
Readers will learn how to construct an efficient portfolio from these building blocks as well as how to manage risk and control costs, informed by detailed descriptions of competing investment models and best practices amongst large institutional asset owners.
Perennial investing topics are explored at length, with fulsome discussions of the pros and cons of liquid vs. illiquid investments, active vs. passive management, as well as the merits of factor investing, ESG investing, macro-resilient portfolios, and tail hedging. Humble forecasting and bold diversification are emphasized throughout the book, as is the need for a combination of good investments with a patient approach.
With a foreword by Cliff Asness, managing and founding principal at AQR Capital Management, Investing Amid Low Expected Returns is a can’t-miss resource for institutional investors and active individual investors seeking an authoritative and eye-opening treatment of intelligent investing principles in the context of diminishing returns.
From the Back Cover
PRAISE FOR Investing Amid Low Expected Returns
“Call it secular stagnation, low neutral rates or hyper liquidity, we are in a very different interest rate era than most of us grew up in. Few, if any, financial questions are more important than what it all means for investment strategy. This important book is the best take that has yet appeared.”
― LAWRENCE H. SUMMERS, Charles W. Eliot University Professor and President Emeritus at Harvard University, Former Secretary of the Treasury and Director of the National Economic Council
“Don’t let the title sway you, this book is foundational investing in every return environment. It is filled with solid investment wisdom that will help all investors build a resilient portfolio and stay the course. The core tenets of investment beliefs, portfolio construction, managing risks, and minimizing costs have withstood the test of time. This is a book for all markets and all investors.”
―CHRISTOPHER AILMAN, Chief Investment Officer, CalSTRS
“Antti has earned the right to be called one of investing’s great practical empiricists. If a research paper has value, he has found it and incorporated it into his comprehensive, well-structured toolkit. He clearly states what is known well and where humility is required. Investment practitioners everywhere need this book.”
―JASE AUBY, Chief Investment Officer, Teacher Retirement System of Texas
“Timeless advice for uncertain times. A rare combination of being both erudite and accessible.”
― EDWIN CASS, Chief Investment Officer, Total Fund Management, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board
“Antti has written an important book addressing the most critical challenge to investing for retirement – low prospective returns for the key asset classes. Reviewing extensive histories with humility and experienced judgment, Antti comes up with a balanced and yet optimistic outlook. Reasonable return streams remain for investors to diversify into; however, patience and good risk control will be required. This book is an encouraging read for investors!”
― JEFFREY PICHET JAENSUBHAKIJ, Group CIO, GIC
“I often describe Antti’s previous book, Expected Returns, as the encyclopedia of empirical research of investment management. More than a decade later, Antti has once again written the quintessential guide to navigating the challenging low-return and high-volatility market environment that may lie ahead. He shares his deep understanding and insights into the various components driving returns and provides a clear framework to guide investors in constructing a portfolio to weather the storm.”
― YU (BEN) MENG, Chair of Asia-Pacific of Franklin Templeton and former CIO of CalPERS
“Antti provides a vital update to the canonical toolkit he presented in Expected Returns. The new book has even broader coverage, yet is more succinct. Investors who read this book will leave with a straightforward risk-return framework, a well-considered set of investment beliefs, a list of bad habits to avoid, and empirically good practices to follow. This book is the foundation of solid portfolio management for institutional and retail investors.”
― LARRY SWEDROE, Chief Research Officer, Buckingham Wealth Partners
About the Author
ANTTI ILMANEN, PHD, is Principal and Global Co-head of the Portfolio Solutions Group at AQR Capital Management. He advises institutional investors and develops AQR’s high-level investment ideas. He is the author of Expected Returns and a recipient of the Graham and Dodd award, the Harry M. Markowitz Special Distinction Award, and multiple Bernstein Fabozzi/Jacobs Levy awards.
Product details
- Publisher : Wiley; 1st edition (April 12, 2022)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1119860199
- ISBN-13 : 978-1119860198
- Item Weight : 1.65 pounds
- Dimensions : 7.3 x 1.5 x 10.3 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #94,768 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #28 in Investment Portfolio Management
- #149 in Business & Finance
- #319 in Introduction to Investing
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Antti Ilmanen is a Principal at AQR Capital Management and the author of "Expected Returns" (Wiley, 2011) as well as its monograph, "Expected Returns on Major Asset Classes." Antti’s second book "Investing Amid Low Expected Returns" will be available in Spring 2022.
A renowned expert on financial investments, Antti has three decades of experience in the investment industry, where he has skillfully served as a bridge between practitioners and financial academic research. At AQR, Antti co-heads the Portfolio Solutions Group, the team responsible for advising institutional investors and developing the firm's broad investment ideas. Prior to joining AQR in 2011, Antti spent seven years as a senior portfolio manager at Brevan Howard and a decade in a variety of roles at Salomon Brothers/Citigroup. He began his career as a central bank portfolio manager in Finland. Over the years, he has advised many institutional investors, including Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global and the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation. Antti has published extensively in finance and investment journals and has received a Graham and Dodd award, the Harry M. Markowitz special distinction award, and multiple Bernstein Fabozzi/Jacobs Levy awards for his articles. He also received the CFA Institute's 2017 Leadership in Global Investment Award.
Antti earned M.Sc. degrees in economics and law from the University of Helsinki and a Ph.D. in finance from the University of Chicago.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Part I: Setting the Stage
Figure 1.2 identifies 9 asset class premia that have, since 1926, delivered persistent, pervasive, and robust rewards that are statistically and economically significant: 4 asset class premia (equity, term, credit and commodities) and 5 style premia (value, momentum, carry, defensive, and trend).
Expected returns in all major asset classes have fallen to near historic lows because everything is discounted by the low yielding treasury bonds. It’s not just bond prices that move inversely to yield.
Part II: Building Blocks of Long-Run Returns
A diversified portfolio of commodity futures has historically earned 3-4% over T-bills.
US equities outperformed foreign equities, but mostly due to much faster real growth in dividends (1.9% in the US vs. near zero elsewhere). Sharpe ratios for 10-year treasuries and global government bonds were comparable to equities.
Antti previously questioned whether or not corporate bonds added value over a blend of equities and treasuries, but he says that newer research clearly answers in the affirmative. He concludes that despite a positive (0.25) correlation with equities, the credit premium has been a useful contributor to investor portfolios. High yield corporate bonds have higher returns, higher volatilities, and higher equity correlations than investment grade bonds. Based on historical experience the average breakeven spread to offset expected default losses is modest (15-25 bps) for the broad investment grade market, but much higher (200-250 bps) for the high yield market.
Commodities, with their growth and inflation exposures, are opposite to bonds. Commodities also have quite mild correlations with either stock (+) or bond (-) markets, so they are excellent diversifiers. Long-run commodity indices use front contracts and roll these to the next contract before expiry. Long-run returns to these indices can naturally be split into spot returns and roll returns. Commodity futures have a long history, although until the late 1940’s are mostly on grain products. Most of the long-run return came from the spot return, with the roll return being consistently negative. Since 1877 commodities had a long run geometric mean of 2-4% and a sharpe ratios near of 0.3.
Part III: Putting it all Together
Long/short strategies enable much more aggressive use of diversification, through shorting and leverage than long-only tilts. Antti contends that multi-metric and industry-neutral value strategies have outperformed.
Value strategies are inherently short a structural change and major value drawdowns have coincided with technological revolutions. Value and momentum work well at different horizons as many assets exhibit trending tendencies up to one-year, but mean-reverting tendencies at multiyear horizons. The negative correlation (often near -0.5) between value and momentum strategies make them great complements and near 50/50 is the implied optimal blend.
Trend-following was profitable every decade for the composite and almost without exception for each asset class. The risks for momentum and trend following come from sharp market turns and whipsawing trendless markets, respectively. Cost-effective trading execution is especially important for these high turnover strategies. Trend has performed very well in the worst equity market drawdowns, especially if they are protracted. Stock selection momentum also tends to perform well during these crashes, but there have been momentum crashes after the market has turned.
A broad definition of carry is an assets return in unchanged market conditions (yield or spread over funding rate). The best known carry trade favors high yielding short term interest rate currencies over low yielding ones. In practice this involved buying emerging market currencies and shorting developed market currencies. This strategy is significantly exposed to equity market risk and thus Antti has characterized this as “picking up pennies in front of a steam roller”.
Quality can be proxied by the bet against beta strategy, where the long side of low beta stocks are levered up and the short side of high beta stocks are levered down to produce a beta neutral strategy. If this strategy is not levered (dollar-neutral) it results in negative beta, but even so offers outperformance through diversification (risk-reduction) even if the raw returns are zero. Betting against beta has offered a higher sharpe ratio and better out of sample performance than Value and Momentum.
Risk parity investing involves taking equal risk in three or four nearly uncorrelated asset classes with similar sharpe ratios and thereby boosting the portolio sharpe ratio to 1.5 – 2x the typical single asset class sharpe ratio. Long short premia can do even better, especially if four of these styles can be applied in four or five asset classes in lowly correlated ways. Thus, portfolio sharpe ratios could plausibly be doubled by style diversification and doubled again by multi-asset applications. The math is basically square root of n, where n is number of uncorrelated investments with similar sharpe ratios.
This math only works by reducing volatility, if investors want to convert the reduced volatility to higher returns, they need to use leverage. Most practical asset allocation has shorting or leverage constraints. Relaxing these constraints is the key. Portfolio volatility declines when more assets are added but the decline is much steeper when lowly correlated investments are combined. For a single style in one asset class, the average SR was 0.4, after combining three to four styles per asset class, the average multi-style SR was 0.8. Then after diversifying across the asset classes, the all-in composite SR was 1.5, an almost four-fold increase. Importantly, this does not include trading costs or fees. Long/short style pairs have near-zero correlations to each other and multi-style composites across asset classes are also very low. These low correlations are not available when using a long-only framework.
Antti describes unlimited liabilities such as selling short a stock as particularly dangerous. Investors need to put survival first. Antti seems to support trend following as downside protection during long slow bear market, but that it is vulnerable to sudden market falls.
AQR published a study on trading/market impact costs using data from 1998-2016 and found that trades cost 9-19bps per dollar traded on average for large/small caps.
My Questions
Antti makes a compelling case for applying long/short strategies across multiple asset classes, seeming to imply a quadrupling of the Sharpe ratio. My main question is what kind of leverage this would realistically take and what borrowing costs would be for all the short positions.
The title is, however, very misleading. I can see why he used this title as a follow up to his earlier “Expected Returns” book but it unnecessarily seems to limit the scope of the work to be applicable only to a low return environment, while it is actually a much more general book. If anything, I wish that he had focused more on the particulars of investing in such an environment.
If I were teaching an introductory college class on investing I would definitely make this prerequisite reading. And it’s an excellent refresher/update for professionals that will also fill in some knowledge gaps.
Highly recommend for anyone serious about long-term "evidence-based" investing. If you can, I would read "Expected Returns" first, but it's not required.
His new book will thoroughly explore how one can derive expected return premia for all asset classes, including how one might practically put that knowledge to use, all the while keeping you grounded with a healthy dose of realism.
It's the thoroughly researched, practical, and no nonsense delivery of information that makes this a serious work with true value for readers. Tempered and well informed advice is what serious readers expect. It delivers exactly that.
Top reviews from other countries
Reviewed in Brazil 🇧🇷 on June 4, 2023
The book was written in 2001, when the everything bubble driven by zero interest rates and quantitative easing suggested different things to different people.
Some who saw the high growth rates feared missing out on expectations of continuing high returns. Others expected low returns based on mean reverting principles that see markets rise and fall.
By May 2023, we know inflation has risen sharply and caused central banks to increase interest rates rapidly.
This has changed the premise from the book. Cash now offers an attractive short term return, compared to other options, even if real interest rates (after inflation) are still negative. Equities and long term bonds fell sharply in 2022, badly damaging anyone with a 60/40 portfolio.
We're also seeing banks crash in the USA, and have a credit crunch that is likely to cause a recession. I think it's likely that the S&P 500 index will fall much further.
These changes mean that in some ways, the problem addressed in the book may have been "cured" by 2024 or 2025. Sharp reductions in asset values could put us back in a position of normal returns.
That said, the book is really about good investment practices and especially, having a properly diversified portfolio.
It's well established that diversification can improve long term returns and reduce volatility. It also emphasises the importance of keeping costs low
This is a book more for professional investors than the general public. You will need to be a sophisticated investor to get value from it.





