 Let's jump over to our man, Teddy Kegstad. Folks, we talk to Teddy every Wednesday at 40 past the hour right here. You can reach Teddy every trading day at his website, 4x-trading-unlock.com. Teddy Kegstad, happy Fed Day, man. Yeah, happy Fed Day is right and what a trading week it's been so far. I mean, how about 10% in the indices, Teddy, in the span of like less than a week? Just crazy volatility in those yields. We get the 10-year at 3.4% right now, I think, and that is off of the highs that we had yesterday, almost a little relief there, but 3.4%. Surprise ECB meeting going on today as if we didn't have enough on the plate. Where do you want to start, man? We have some action at the end. We've got some action in the euro, the pound, and crude holding up relatively well. Where do you want to kick things off? Okay, well, we had the obviously a dollar index broke out to the upside two sessions ago and followed through yesterday. I think what you're seeing today right now, though, is the beginning of a bounce. Now, obviously there's a Fed Day and there's also this ECB thing. This could change a lot of things. But technically and fundamentally from the way the market's been moving, I reverse yesterday. I actually, I've been on the US dollar Swiss and US dollar Yen for a while, especially the Swiss also recently. I sold out of them yesterday after the markets closed and I actually reverse. So, yes, Tommy, I am short the US dollar Yen right now. Nice, things changed. I mean, it's been some amazing moves, man. I have the US dollar Swiss up here back to parity from 96 after being at parity on what? May 13th, is that right? Just that type of action. And yeah, the Yen. I was checking out the Yen early in the program on one of the breaks, getting ready for you. That thing just continued even after we talked a little bit of a not consolidation, but not quite the move that it had off of 127. But we hit a new high today, just above the high yesterday, 135.56. So, you'd be looking for a pullback in that number in the Yen as well? Well, here's what I'm looking for. And we're going to have a little divergence of the currencies right now. So, not only did I get short those currencies, I got long the pound dollar. I got long the Aussie dollar. I got long the New Zealand dollar. I also got long the Euro US dollar. So, now the Euro US dollar and Swiss US dollar Swiss right now are not act, they're kind of quiet because of the CCB meeting. That is definitely putting a lag on them. They caught a nice little bounce off the lows yesterday. Now, the interesting thing is you had, for instance, the Euro US dollar did not make a new weekly low over the past couple of sessions. The pound did, so there's got a nice little bounce. Australian dollar made a nice new low, sort of the New Zealand dollar, they're bouncing. So, right now I'm looking for just a corrective bounce, meaning the dollar index has pierced new highs. I'm looking for a little pullback in the dollar. So, now this is without taking the Fed meeting or the ECB into play. So, right now I think that that's the trade that's going on right now technically, because the momentum is running out of gas right now, short term. Now, what Chairman Powell does today or not, I can't, I don't have a crystal ball on that one. I would hope that all this talking head nonsense, who was saying already a long time ago the Fed should do a three-quarter point or a full point? I've been saying that over a year ago that they needed to do that. Now is not the time to start getting that aggressive, because you have a Treasury Secretary that just finally admitted that, oh, they got it wrong. Inflation really is here, and it probably isn't going away anytime soon. So, how is the Fed going to react to that one? And I think if they really juice the interest rates, I mean, what are they trying to break the system? I mean, we already know that with the economic numbers that are coming out, that you certainly get these lags, especially in sales. And if this hits like the car markets too, like if you raise the interest rates three-quarters of a point, I mean, mortgages are slowing down, refinances are slowing down, car buying, even electric car buying is going to have a noose around its neck. So, and I think that these are things that the Fed, if the Chairman, if he's not paying attention to this and doesn't address this today and actually follows the talking head speak, I mean, we're going to have some really volatile swings, not to mention, you know what? It's going to be really hard on the stock market, you know? I mean, it's a tech on the oil industry also. If they impose this nonsense about if they have more than 10% profits on the year, I mean, you're looking at an industry that struggled for a couple of years over the last year and a half because of presidential mandate, they're making money, you can't put a noose around their neck because that means any business at any time they can come and say, by the way, TFNN, you can only make 10% more than you did last year. The rest goes to us. Yeah, it's a tough one, man. That's not a good thing for the market. No. But anyhow, back to the Fed thing, I think the dollar is going to turn on this number today. Yeah, I mean, I saw something, I think the 30-year mortgage is up to like 6.28% and I'm ballparking numbers, folks. But I saw something like a $450,000 house last year at 3% is basically akin to like a $320,000 house this year at 6% for the payment. Meanwhile, that $450,000 house last year is probably $550,000 or $600,000 or something bonkers if it's in Florida, it is meant with the real estate prices they're at. So all of them combined, it's pretty wild. And we have a 10-year yield that's at 3.4%. We're almost up two full percentage points from where we began the year. And maybe this is where, you know, maybe, maybe. Yeah, I just mammoth moves, I know. I mean, do you remember the conversation, Teddy? And it was a decent conversation as in people weren't crazy saying, maybe we stop at 2.5 for a little while, right? Maybe we stop at 3% and the market just kind of digest this number and then the market becomes okay with 3% as we get 3 or 6 points. I mean, it just doesn't stop right now. So eventually it will stop though. And maybe we've kind of, maybe we're inching closer to that point. Crude, what's your take on crude? We had a little bit of negative action yesterday, but we've talked about it before, man. In context to where this market's been, $5 and $6 swings are almost the expected norm at this point. $1,1814 I have right now for the price of a barrel of sweet crude. What's your action in the crude market? Just a little pullback, you know. I think it's just literally just a little pullback. That's it. You know, we keep on making higher move highs and higher move lows. So I think that no matter what, it's an edgy trade. Oil is not just shooting up to $150 overnight, you know? I mean, there's nothing like that's going, but the trend is still edging higher. And especially as interest rates, you know, I think that one of the things is interest rates, if they get a bounce here in the short term, I think that you can see oil probably stabilize for a little bit and maybe play with support. But I don't see it really breaking. And I think that once interest rates start to pound the lows again, oil is going to start to pound the highs again as well. Got to love it, man. Now, you've talked about it before, Teddy, was saying, you know, people who are seeing those crude numbers, they see the volatility. If they're thinking about trading crude currency-wise, how do you look at that market? If you're thinking of trading crude, maybe in trading currencies, I know you talk about even maybe options in that market. For those that didn't catch that conversation the first time we had it, what do you look at when you kind of explain that previously, how you trade a market so volatile? I think that the US dollar yen, the pound dollar, are two of the really best ones to use when it comes to trading the oil trade without using the oil futures. You can also use the euro as well. But I think that the pound and the yen are basically the best crosses when you want it. And also, the Canadian dollar can be, but right now it's not. It's just because the Canadian dollar is this one big sloppy range trade. And you've talked about, because just to bring it in full fruition, like the dollar yen, right, as the US being a producer and the Japanese being consumers, that's where they really get hit there as that market explodes. It's a great conversation, man. And they're a big manufacturer, too. So that's a huge thing, too. Nice. Well, Teddy, man, we appreciate you taking the time. As always, it should be a wild day. I don't know where we're going to be a week from now when we talk to you, man. But we appreciate the education. Yeah, it's been very interesting today. So stay out of the sidelines when we're not already in. Right? Seriously. Well, Teddy, have a great one, man. Have a great week, and we'll talk to you next Wednesday. Absolutely. See you next week, Tom.