 Welcome back folks, down is up 76, Nasdaq up 36, S&Ps up 8.5, crude oil. We had a draw of a million barrels, I thought that was going, yeah I thought it was going to go the other way. They expected a draw of 3 million. So let's pull up the top lab, they were looking for a draw of 3 to 4 million. The draw comes in, where are we, crude oil, here we go. So there's your number. Inventory is falling 1 million barrels, gas inventory is falling 1.58, expectation, there you go, Bloomberg is looking for a draw before, that should have had, so there's, let me get this right. No, I missed it, I'm doing it backwards, there's more oil than the market anticipated, so there's going to be cheaper prices, right, so the market did react correctly in terms of that fall. So the market goes from right at 57, we spiked to 5646, we're sitting at 5660. And I took a quick peek at these, we had, what was kind of cool is we're sitting at 57, we had optionability right at 57 for bullish exposure and bearish. If you wanted to get both of these sides of the trade, so you just trade in volatility, to get exposure until noon, you were looking at about $50 for both contracts combined, which represents 50 cents a movement you need, we got 50 cents a movement in about 3 seconds. If you wanted exposure until 2.30, now interesting here that even though the stock market's close to 1 o'clock, looks like oil futures, they're going to be trading until 2.30 as normally, and that trade, and you also have $3 a potential movement on either side, that was going to cost you $38 on each side of the trade, or about 75, so 50 bucks, which means 50 cents on the noon, or 75 bucks, which is 75 cents by 2.30, and if you made that trade you have to be pretty excited that you got 50 cents a movement in the heartbeat coming off those numbers. Especially after a day like yesterday, because yesterday started off a little bit slow and now all of a sudden it just got hammered. Sure, yeah, and so there's all the numbers coming in as in crude, only a decline of a million barrels, they were thinking you'd see a decline of three, maybe four, if you went off the survey number, gasoline, decline of 1.5, estimate had been a decline of 2.4, so similar story, more gas than they thought, and breaking that down, but we'll see how that oil market reacts throughout the day, yeah, gotta love it. And speaking of commodities, one check back on the oil contract, quite a five minute bar we had on that news, you dropped from 57 all the way down to 56.19, we're sitting at about 56.48 on a bounce on those oil numbers. Maybe some cheaper gas to go along with cheaper money, low interest rates, cheap gas, what could be better, man, kind of like cynical as in folks, gas does not tank, interest rates are not at zero as the market goes to the moon, okay, that's not how things usually work, all right, you know, if factories and everyone's using oil and everybody can make money because they can use money, then interest rates would be higher and oil would be higher, and so we'll see what happens, but interesting nonetheless, man, it is. Imagine being a professor right now in a financial class. Yeah, it's pretty tough. So there's so many variables, we all know the variables, but which ones are the most important ones the market's considering? That's what you're trying to say. What is the market going to pay attention to? Exactly, totally.