While it remains to be seen how the rest of the America will benefit from another Clinton presidency, especially if the middle class-sapping Obamacare tax remains unchanged, one small group is delighted by today's 2% surge in the S&P500: according to Bloomberg calculations, the world’s wealthiest people became $37 billion richer on Monday as markets soared, undoing all November losses in one session, rallying on mounting speculation that Hillary Clinton will be elected U.S. president after the FBI unexpectedly closed its reopened probe into Clinton's email server. Their combined net worth on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index rose 0.9 percent from Friday’s close to $4.4 trillion in afternoon trading.

"The market’s perception is that a Clinton presidency will be similar to the last eight years in terms of regulatory action and the amount of change in the economy will be less than under a Trump presidency," said Robert Lutts, chief investment officer of Cabot Wealth Management Inc. in Salem, Massachusetts.

Not surprisingly, U.S. billionaires prefer a Clinton presidency, as measured by their donations to the two candidates, with 17 of the country’s richest people contributing to the Democratic nominee, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

As Bloomberg adds, U.S. billionaires account for one-third of the Bloomberg wealth ranking and had the biggest gains among the group, adding $22 billion. Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos, ranked No. 3 in the world on Friday with $65.7 billion, led the surge with a $2.7 billion rise. Warren Buffett, the fourth-richest person in the world with $64.4 billion, added $1.5 billion.

Gains were broad-based across sectors and industries, with 140 billionaires seeing gains of $100 million or more this morning. Bill Gates is the world’s richest person with a net worth of $84.9 billion and added $700 million on Monday.

It wasn't just Americans: Mexico’s richest person, Telecom magnate Carlos Slim and Trump nemesis, added $2.2 billion as the Mexican peso rallied with expectation of a defeat for Trump.

But what if the market is getting ahead of itself, a la Brexit, and pricing in an event that may not happen? In that case, here are some charts from Deutsche Bank which lay out how a Trump victory would impact various asset classes.