Last month, President Donald Trump reportedly floated a potential new campaign slogan: “How’s your 401(k) doing?”

Fair enough... the stock market has certainly been on fire, enriching those fortunate enough to have exposure to it at times likes these. As the president, he might as well crow about it. But his question raises another question: Um, how many people even have 401(k)s? Or money in stocks at all?

Turns out less than half of Americans are able to enjoy the fat gains in their retirement accounts. Because, well, they don’t have retirement accounts. Clearly, a fair chunk of Trump’s base aren’t benefiting in a meaningful way from this rally.

Obviously, wealthier people tend to have more of their net worth in stocks, mutual funds and fixed income. But there are some other less-obvious differences up and down the wealth spectrum when it comes to which assets comprise net worth.

In an effort to highlight some of those differences, the Visual Capitalist blog crunched government data and highlighted trends in this colorful illustration:

As you can see, net worth is broken down into six different brackets, starting with sub-$10,000 to $99,000 and all the way up to $1 billion. There’s a clear pattern emerging here, that speaks to the idea that Americans — most of which fit solidly on the higher half of the chart — simply aren’t investing enough. Or aren’t able to.

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For those caught on the wrong side of income inequality, net worth is generally all about the equity they have in their home and the car, as represented by the red and orange bars. But as we climb the wealth ladder, those steadily give way to the blue and light blue bars, which represent two areas where the vast majority of people have trouble dabbling in: equities and business ventures.