Morningstar’s Q2 2026 stock market forecast is titled “Don’t Panic, Readjust.” The report’s tone can be inferred from the way it is phrased, which is a combination of instruction and assurance. When things are going well, you wouldn’t write such a headline. It’s the type of writing you do when a lot is going on at once and you don’t want to be held accountable for the overreaction.
As of late March, the following were all going on at once: a spike in oil prices caused by the ongoing US-Iran conflict, which has driven crude above $100 per barrel; a Federal Reserve that is unable to hike without risking a recession or cut without fueling inflation; a new Fed chair taking office in May whose policy preferences are not fully understood by the market; a technology sector that is in deep discount territory; an energy sector that has already surged 34% and is currently the most overvalued segment of the market; and a first-quarter earnings season, which starts the week of April 13, which most analysts anticipate unusually conservative management guidance.
The rotation occurring beneath the S&P 500 is understated by its headline number, which is down roughly 3.5% for the quarter ending March 23. While some industries have experienced significant growth, others have been severely impacted. A turbulent picture at the sector level is being covered up by the calm number at the index level.
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| Report | Morningstar Q2 2026 Stock Market Outlook — published March 26, 2026 |
| Market Valuation (as of March 23) | US equity market trading at a 12% discount to Morningstar’s composite fair value estimates (price/fair value: 0.88) |
| Large Cap Discount | 13% below fair value |
| Small Cap Discount | 17% below fair value — described as most attractively priced part of the market |
| Growth Stock Discount | 21% below fair value — below this level less than 5% of the time since 2011 |
| Best-Performing Sector (Q1 2026) | Energy — up 34% YTD; now described as the most overvalued sector; analysts beginning to recommend profit-taking |
| Worst-Performing Sector | Technology (software-heavy) — 23% discount; not at this level except during 2022 market bottom and 2011 European debt crisis |
| Key Macro Risk | US-Iran war pushing oil prices above $100/barrel; Fed cornered between inflation and slowing growth; new Fed chair taking over May 2026 |
| Q1 2026 Earnings Season Start | Week of April 13 — banks first; guidance conservatism expected from management teams building in war-related uncertainty |
| Morningstar Overall Market Return (Q1 to March 23) | −3.49% — modest decline masking significant sector-level rotation |
Although Morningstar’s 12% discount is significant, there is a big disclaimer in the report’s wording. According to their analysis, the market is attractively valued “but for a reason.” The Iran War, disruptions in the oil supply, the Fed’s limited stance, deteriorating macro data, and the uncertainty surrounding whether the AI capital expenditure boom that propelled markets through 2025 will result in real revenue growth in 2026 or continue to be a wager on unrealized future returns are the reasons for this. In a podcast last week, David Sekera, chief US market strategist at Morningstar, pointed out that stock prices and oil futures seem to be pricing in different scenarios: stock prices suggest a relatively contained selloff, while oil futures suggest supply constraints that last for several more months. Simply put, he said, “Someone is wrong.”
The most practically useful information can be found in the sector rotation story. One of the most undervalued industries going into 2026 was energy, and analysts who had been advising an overweight stake in it saw it soar 34% in the first quarter due to the spike in oil prices following the US bombing campaign in Iran. It was a successful overweight call. These same analysts are now advocating for trimming. The narrative that supported the position—cheap energy stocks as a hedge against inflation and geopolitical disruption—has been more than priced in at this point, and the sector is overpriced after the surge. The question is where the money that flows out of energy must go.

The numbers become truly intriguing in the technology sector, in part due to the historical rarity of the current discount. According to the report, growth stocks are currently trading at a 21% discount to Morningstar’s fair value estimates, which has happened less than 5% of the time since 2011. The peak of the European sovereign debt crisis in 2011 and the market bottom in 2022 were the last times technology traded at a comparable discount. Although Morningstar is careful to point out that stocks are undervalued “for a reason,” this does not rule out another leg down. However, it does indicate that the prices being offered on AI-adjacent technology stocks currently reflect a lot of negative news that has already been incorporated. Morningstar raised its fair value estimates for a number of tech companies despite price declines, citing the hyperscalers’ continued announcement of larger-than-expected capital expenditure plans for AI infrastructure. The formula for a bigger discount is lower prices on higher valuations.
The factor that makes Q2 forecasting especially challenging is the Fed situation. Although rate cuts are anticipated to be preferred by the new Fed chair, Kevin Warsh, who was nominated by President Trump to succeed Jerome Powell in May, oil prices above $100 create the kind of inflationary pressure that makes rate cuts politically and economically problematic. The June meeting is the first with better-than-even odds, according to the CME FedWatch tool, which shows rate cut probabilities pushed to the second half of the year at the earliest. Even that timeline is pushed if core inflation surprises to the upside in this week’s reports. Without being specifically mentioned, the stagflation framing—slowing growth, sticky inflation, and a central bank unable to assist—is making the rounds in analyst commentary, which is a signal unto itself.
The next actual data point will be the first-quarter earnings season, which begins on April 13. As usual, bank profits come first, followed by the tech behemoths. The Q1 numbers themselves aren’t the primary factor because most businesses locked in those results prior to the Iran War’s dramatic escalation. It’s the direction. Analysts generally share Sekera’s expectation that management teams will release cautious figures to account for uncertainty in Q2. If that occurs, the market might interpret conservative guidance as a real warning instead of typical sandbagging and respond appropriately.
Reading the different Q2 forecasts coming in from Morningstar, Morgan Stanley, and smaller companies makes it difficult to ignore the recurring theme of “stay disciplined, harvest gains where you have them, deploy into undervaluation where you can find it.” That advice makes sense in practically any market setting, which may be why it’s being given right now. What sets this moment apart from general caution is the more detailed observation that growth stocks at a 21% discount and small caps at a 17% discount are historically cheap. The question Q2 will address is whether the unknowns resolve favorably enough to allow that cheapness to matter.

