Donald Trump Steven MnuchinWall Street has lots of ideas for how investors can trade for Donald Trump and Steve Mnuchin's tax plan.Alex Wong/Getty Images
Corporations aren't the only ones set to profit from the Republican tax plan released on Wednesday.
You can too — if you know where to look.
Just focus on the so-called Trump trade, which involves betting on the areas of the market poised to benefit most from the pro-business policy overhaul being touted by President Donald Trump.
Investors have already started piling back into the trade after a long hiatus, as they start to hope for real progress on the policy front.
But don't worry; you haven't missed much yet. There's still a great deal of upside potential to be realized, especially since these same Trump-linked strategies retraced all of their postelection gains — and then some — as investors lost confidence in the president's proposed policies.

Here's a quick primer on what matters to investors:

  • The key measure investors are focusing on involves a lowering of the corporate tax rate to 20% from 35%. Trump has pushed for 15% in the past, but that's being increasingly viewed as unviable.
  • The repatriation tax holiday for companies holding trillions of dollars overseas. They'll be allowed to bring that cash back to the US at a lower-than-usual rate. It could spur investment in the US, but it's also very likely to wind up being used to pay dividends and buy back shares.
  • Another element that investors could trade on is the ability to immediately expense capital expenditures.
The two most straightforward Trump trades involve buying stock in two types of companies:
  1. Those that pay the most taxes and
  2. Those that hold the most cash overseas.
Lucky for you, both Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have baskets tracking both groups.
For more detail, here's a breakdown of how those two firms, plus two other Wall Street titans, recommend investors play tax reform:

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