I agree with those who say "let it ride."
There might be exceptions to that rule. I hope you didn't invest your whole nest-egg in stocks related to travel and crowd-entertainment. A lot of that stuff isn't coming back quickly.
And, because of the price-wars with the Saudis and the Russians, the American energy sector is "taking a bath," as they say. (The only upside is that U.S. citizens will be seeing really low gas prices.)
Amazon and other deliver-to-your-door companies are doing well. Biotech and med-supply will have some short-term opportunities.
And companies that have already diversified their supply-chains AWAY from China will inspire investor confidence, because confidence in China isn't coming back any time soon. Most of the world feels Xi & Co. screwed us pretty hard by suppressing knowledge of the outbreak for 2 months, and that makes us all less-forgiving of all the other totalitarian crap they've been pulling, whether it's Big Brother On Steroids, threatening to cut off medicine supplies to the U.S., bulldozing churches, requiring citizens to study The Wise Sayings of Xi an hour a day (with a test!), or just freakin' harvesting organs from hapless Uighur prisoners. I guess you can do business with Stalin for a little while, in order to defeat Hitler, but nobody really wants to just do business with Hitler, full stop.
The time for decoupling has arrived.
Still, I think everybody's waiting for signs that the worst is passed and that the lifting of social distancing regulations might happen in a week or two. That's when people will start jumping back in, hoping to snap up bargains before the prices return to normal.
OF COURSE NONE OF THIS IS INVESTMENT ADVICE. It's worth less than what you paid for it, and nobody should take investment tips from random people posting in Internet Forums.