WASHINGTON -- Wall Street sure loves the tax bill, even if polls show most Americans don't.

The Dow Jones industrial average surged past 25,000 Thursday, a strong signal of investor enthusiasm for U.S. President Donald Trump's $1.5 trillion tax cut. The milestone comes less than a year after the Dow topped 20,000.

"We broke a very, very big barrier," Trump said Thursday at the White House. "Every time you see that number go up on Wall Street it means jobs, it means success, it means 401(k)s that are flourishing."

It's easy to see why investors like the tax overhaul: Businesses will benefit from a steep cut in the corporate tax rate. They'll also be able to fully deduct the cost of major purchases from their taxable income, reducing the amount they owe. And companies with large stockpiles of cash overseas can bring the money back to the United States at new, lower rates.

All told, Wall Street analysts estimate the tax package should boost earnings for companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 index by roughly 8 per cent this year. That's much more generous than the average tax cut of 1.6 per cent that middle-class families will receive, according to the Tax Policy Center.

"All else being equal, this should go straight to the bottom line," said David Joy, chief market strategist for Ameriprise Financial, a financial services company based in Minneapolis. Improved corporate profits contributed to the market's gains last year.

The public has been less enthusiastic about the tax law. A Monmouth University poll last month found that nearly half of Americans disapproved of it, with only 26 per cent in support.

Still, some workers have seen a benefit: So far, nearly 20 large companies have announced bonuses and higher minimum wages as a result of the tax cut. AT&T, Comcast, Bank of America, and American Airlines have all pledged to pay $1,000 bonuses to their employees.

Investors also appear less concerned than many politicians about how the additional profits will be used. The Trump administration says it expects companies will plow much of the extra profit back into their businesses, purchasing more software, machinery, and other equipment. Those investments will make workers more productive and provide a key boost to the economy's long-run growth. They should also boost wages and salaries for employees.

Opponents of the tax law respond that companies are more likely to pass the windfall on to shareholders in the form of higher dividend payments and share buybacks, which raise the price of those shares still in investors' hands. Previous cuts in corporate tax rates, in the U.S. and overseas, haven't always led to higher wages.

For Wall Street, it's all good, at least in the short run. Most analysts take the view that either way, companies and the economy will benefit. Whether businesses pass most of the extra money to workers or to shareholders, consumer spending should increase and lift economic growth.

Trump has repeatedly made highly optimistic claims about the impact of his tax cuts and other policies on the economy, speculating that they would lead to annual growth of 4 per cent or higher.

Last month, the Treasury Department estimated that the economy will expand at a 2.9 per cent annual rate for the next decade.

Private economists, as well as the Federal Reserve, forecast a more modest impact. Most expect growth will be closer to 2.5 per cent in 2018 and slower than that in subsequent years.

Some companies and sectors will likely benefit more than others, particularly if they derive most of their income from the United States. Analysts at Goldman Sachs estimate that large banks will see their earnings rise by 13 per cent as a result of the corporate rate cut. Wells Fargo will likely see the biggest gain, at 18 per cent.

Analysts at Stifel, an investment bank, project that some restaurant chains could see earnings boosts of 20 per cent or more, including Chipotle, Wingstop and Domino's Pizza.

Barclays, another bank, says that technology and pharmaceutical firms, which are already paying lower taxes because they have lots of cash overseas, will see much smaller increases of less than 4 per cent.

The legislation's corporate tax cut is not necessarily as dramatic as it seems, because most corporations don't end up paying the full 35 per cent rate. Barclays estimates that the "effective" tax rate -- what companies actually pay -- will drop from 26 per cent to 20.1 per cent.

Joy and other analysts think that most of the money brought back from other countries will go to shareholders, rather than investment. That's what happened in 2004, when companies were given a one-time low rate on repatriated cash as an inducement.

Opinions differ, however, when it comes to the additional profits that result from the tax cut. Many economists expect that most of those dollars will also be passed on to shareholders.

Glenn Hubbard, an economist at Columbia Business School and former top economist for President George W. Bush, says the corporate tax cut will eventually benefit workers through higher pay. That will also boost the economy and most businesses by lifting spending.

"Any way you slice it, it's good for companies," Hubbard said.

For much of last year, the stock market's gains were helped by a synchronized global recovery, with economies from Europe to Asia to Latin America expanding simultaneously for the first time in a decade.

Since November, investors' anticipation of a tax cut has pushed markets higher, said Keith Parker, an analyst at UBS.

Still, the market's outsize return, only benefits a narrow slice of the population. According to research by Edward Wolff, an economist at New York University, just 10 per cent of the population owns 84 per cent of the stock market's value.

"That benefit won't accrue to everybody, certainly," Joy said.