The world is watching with concern the spread of the new coronavirus.  The uncertainty is being felt around the globe, and it is unsettling on a human level as well as from the perspective of how markets respond.

It is a fundamental principle, in our investment process, that markets are designed to handle uncertainty, processing information in real-time as it becomes available.  We see this happening when markets decline sharply, as they have recently, as well as when they rise.  Such declines can be distressing to any investor, but they are also a demonstration that the market is functioning as we would expect.

Market declines can occur when investors are forced to reassess expectations for the future. The expansion of the outbreak of the Coronavirus is causing worry among governments, companies and individuals about the impact on the global economy.  Apple announced earlier this month that it expected revenue to take a hit from problems making and selling products in China.  Australia’s prime minister has said the virus will likely become a global pandemic and other officials there warned of a serious blow to the country’s economy.  Airlines are preparing for the toll it will take on travel.  These are just a few examples of how the impact of the coronavirus is being assessed.

The market is clearly responding to new information as it becomes known, but the market is pricing in unknowns, too.  As risk increases during a time of heightened uncertainty, so do the returns investors demand for bearing that risk, which pushes prices lower.  Our investing approach is based on the principle that prices are set to deliver positive future expected returns for holding risky assets.

We can’t tell you when things will turn or by how much, but our expectation is that bearing today’s risk will be compensated with positive expected returns.  That’s been a lesson of past health crises, such as the Ebola and swine-flu outbreaks earlier this century and of market disruptions, such as the global financial crisis of 2008 to 2009.  Additionally, history has shown no reliable way to identify a market peak or bottom.  These beliefs argue against making market moves based on fear or speculation, even as difficult and traumatic events transpire.

Investors that have developed a long-term plan that they can stick with in a variety of conditions will benefit from their upfront work that they did before they put their money to use. Investment plans that consider a wide range of possible outcomes, both good and bad, should help with the anxiety that accompanies developments surrounding the coronavirus.

Apple, February 17 press release. https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2020/02/investor-update-on-quarterly-guidance/

Ben Doherty and Katharine Murphy, “Australia Declares Coronavirus Will Become a Pandemic as It Extends China Travel Ban,” The Guardian, February 27, 2020. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/27/australia-declares-coronavirus-will-become-a-pandemic-as-it-extends-china-travel-ban

Ben Butler, “Coronavirus Threatens Australian Economy Reeling from Drought and Fires,” The Guardian, February 5, 2020. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/feb/05/coronavirus-threatens-australian-economy-reeling-from-drought-and-fires; Ed Johnson, “Australia Says Economy to Take ‘Significant’ Hit from Virus,” Bloomberg, February 5, 2020. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-02-05/australia-says-economy-to-take-significant-hit-from-virus

Alistair MacDonald and William Boston, “Global Airlines Brace for Coronavirus Impact,” The Wall Street Journal, February 26, 2020. https://www.wsj.com/articles/germanys-lufthansa-makes-cuts-as-it-braces-for-coronavirus-impact-11582712819