 Jim, I also want to talk about Nordstrom potentially looking to go private. This is very big. I mean, I know Nordstrom followed it for a long time, interviewed Bruce Nordstrom, who's the driver. He's 15%. Nordstrom has long felt and has always traced out a little bit of the last conference call was not about this. The notion we have all profitable stores, the notion that we have spent a lot of money on e-commerce, the notion that we're ready to take on Amazon, the notion that our customer service is still good, the notion that we have a long-term game plan for off-price, which is the rack, and where I come back and just say, this is, they're mad as hell and they're not going to take it anymore. It's a family-run business in the end and they're mad as hell that people do not give them any credit for what they've done. I think this deal will happen. I don't know the price. I often also think that maybe that's hubris. Maybe they shouldn't do the deal, but that's not up to me. If I own Nordstrom, I would sell a quarter, but I think I'd let the rest run for a couple of days. Ultimately, probably want to have a half-on, maybe a week from now. Why? Because Bruce Nordstrom owns 15% of the company and he wants this deal done, according to my sources.