Talk about timing. On Monday, a day before the U.S. stock market suffered its worst one-day decline in what Bloomberg calls an "awful year," Morningstar's director of personal finance, Christine Benz, published "Your Market Downturn Tool Kit."
The checklist for investors, originally published in February but republished Monday, can be used by advisors who want to offer more than simple "stay the course" advice to nervous clients during market routs, which lately have often lasted for several days.
The latest price plunge on Tuesday erased all of this year's gains in the S&P 500 and Dow Jones industrial average, which remained the case even after the rally on Wednesday, before Thanksgiving.
Benz includes in her checklist a number of Morningstar tools to help with this exercise as well as apps from mutual fund companies such as Vanguard, Fidelity and T. Rowe Price. We include these tools in the checklist below only as guide acknowledging that advisors usually have their favored tools for conducting similar exercises. Advisors can, however, compare their tools to those that Benz recommends. That could be especially useful when talking to clients who regularly read Morningstar and may even ask about Benz's recommendations.
Review Stock/Bond Mix
A 60/40 stock/bond allocation in 2009 now has even more stocks than an 80/20 mix due to the surge in stock prices that began soon after the dramatic rally that followed the Great Recession. Investors who want to stick with a more balanced portfolio need to reduce their stock exposure but should also take into account the underlying holdings of their mutual funds when doing so, according to Benz.
With that data in hand, they can then compare it to a benchmark such as Morningstar's Lifetime Allocation Index or a target date fund that's geared to an investor's retirement date such as Vanguard's and BlackRock's Lifepath index Series, writes Benz.