Worst-ideas-only scenario: policymakers and regulators choose a set of reflexive, market-disruptive fixes that exacerbate the current risks (high valuations, energy shock, trade fragmentation, and sticky inflation) rather than resolving them. Example “solutions” and their consequences: 1) Aggressive, retroactive fiscal tightening and punitive corporate tax hikes tied to OBBBA windfalls — immediate earnings scares, hit to capex and buybacks, large downward revisions to tech and industrial margins; forces equity re-rating and weakens sentiment toward growth stocks. 2) Blanket export bans on advanced AI chips and semiconductor equipment (broadly applied, including to allied partners) — supply-chain fragmentation, lost sales for Nvidia/ASML/Intel/AMD, step-up in inventory shocks and near-term capex pullbacks from hyperscalers, sharp hit to AI-related valuation multiples. 3) Escalatory tariffs and onshoring mandates (sudden, wide tariffs on key intermediate goods) — higher producer costs, margin compression across industrials and consumer electronics, boost to domestic input-price inflation and slower global growth. 4) Mishandled Fed response: an ill-timed, large rate cut to “support” markets despite energy-driven CPI upside — fuels expectation of stagflation, steeper real-term yields later, and a loss of Fed credibility that spikes term premia and hits long-duration growth names hardest. 5) Heavy-handed energy-market interventions (price caps, nationalization threats, or abrupt export restrictions) — squeezes investment in oil capex, spikes oil risk premia and volatility in oil majors, worsens supply uncertainty. Cumulative market effects: sharp risk-off repricing, elevated volatility, sector rotation toward cash-flow-heavy “quality” and away from high-multiple growth, deeper drawdown in AI/semis, cyclicals and consumer discretionary. Credit spreads widen; financials see stress from slower activity and mark-to-market losses; commodity and FX volatility rise. FX and commodity relevance: USD likely to see safe-haven choking and policy-driven swings — USD/JPY and EUR/USD would experience heightened volatility as risk-off flows oscillate; USD/CAD would respond to oil-price shocks. A coordinated hit to earnings and higher-term premia makes the path to the S&P re-test of lower levels much more likely in this scenario.