Market volatility will continue throughout 2020, but Morningstar analysts don't expect a 2008-style recession to happen in the U.S. as a result of the coronavirus and expects an economic recovery to start in 2021, they said Tuesday during a webinar called "Navigating Investing during Novel Coronavirus."
"The current crisis has obviously created upheaval for all of us on a personal level," as well as the economy and the markets, moderator Christine Benz, director of personal finance at Morningstar, said at the start of the webinar. "Many of you are navigating these extremely volatile market conditions for client portfolios and it's no doubt stressful."
One especially concerning element of the current crisis is that "events have been unfolding very quickly," according to Jeff Wagner, portfolio specialist with Morningstar Investment Services.
Going into February, the U.S. market was entering the 11th year of a bull market, the longest ever, and U.S. large-cap growth companies were doing especially well, he noted. "Consumer sentiment was particularly high, but that also made the market a little bit more sensitive and a little bit more vulnerable to a shock such as the one we're experiencing right now," he pointed out.
Morningstar's portfolios were "positioned rather defensively relative to their targets" entering February, he said.
However, the coronavirus "has been a surprise" and is a "hard-to-quantify risk that's injected a lot of uncertainty into the marketplace," he noted. And it also comes at a point when the global economy has become "more connected than ever in terms of travel and in terms of global supply chains," he said.
Despite the fact that experts claim market corrections are "healthy," market "volatility can be very unsettling for both end investors and the professionals who serve them," he conceded.
Investors tend to want to take some action as a result of such volatility, but research shows that "tends to do more harm than good" to portfolios, he told listeners. History has shown that "now is not the time to make any big moves in your portfolio — it's better to stay the course and stick to your long-term goals," he said.