White House projects OBBBA tax incentives could lift GDP to as high as ~4.9%, a pro-growth fiscal narrative that should be broadly supportive for cyclical parts of the market and firms tied to domestic investment. Near-term implications: boosts to domestic capex, construction, and consumer spending should favor industrials, materials, homebuilders and consumer discretionary names. Financials can benefit from stronger loan growth and steeper yield curves if markets price in higher-for-longer rates. At the same time, a stronger growth signal raises inflation and rate-risk — reinforcing the Fed’s higher-for-longer bias and potentially pressuring richly valued, long-duration growth and high-multiple tech names. Given stretched equity valuations (high Shiller CAPE) the market is sensitive to earnings and policy surprises, so the net effect is positive but not extreme. Key segments: industrials (Caterpillar), semiconductors/AI-infrastructure (benefit from onshoring and capex — Applied Materials, Lam Research, Nvidia), homebuilders and housing-related retail (D.R. Horton, Lennar, Home Depot), and banks (JPMorgan, Bank of America) that could see NII gains if yields rise. FX: a stronger growth outlook typically supports the USD versus peers (USD/JPY, EUR/USD relevance) though large fiscal deficits put longer-term pressure on the currency — creating a two-way risk. Watchables: inflation/core PCE reaction, Fed communications on policy path, and whether projected GDP gains are front-loaded (faster growth, higher yields) or more gradual (sustained cyclical tailwind).