 Actually, in fact, this actually leads me onto quite an interesting, I guess, an interesting talk, I'd say interesting, you might find it interesting, you might not, but generally we trade divergences, right? So you have to be aware of this. I've mentioned this many times before, but I think I'll mention it again. Generally, when a central bank is hiking rates and another one is cutting rates, that is probably the best trade you can have. Yeah, when it comes to divergences, that will even lead to, you know, strong downtrends or strong uptrends. Yeah, that's pretty much what that will lead to. Now, you can have situations where banks will, so this is hiking, this is holding, and this is cutting. Yeah, banks will look to potentially hold rates, right? And this is probably the second best trade you can have where you have a bank that's high. You buy the one that's hiking rates and you sell the one that's holding rates. Yeah, so the whole hiking rates is always like to appreciate their currency. Yeah, but there is a time, there are moments where you will have a bank that is looking to now strengthen their currency. So for years, the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank were, and the Euro, matter of fact, were wanting to devalue their currency, right? But now you're getting, those banks are looking to now, because of inflation and rising inflation, they're looking to potentially hike rates. So what would that mean on a price chart? So it means that the, you know, when you see, rather than seeing a potentially strong trend, yeah, let's say for example, dollar, let's go back to the dollar yen, right? Let's say, for example, we stay in history, the Bank of Japan Governor Karuda comes out and he literally says, now I'm looking to hike rates, yeah? What do you think is going to happen to the dollar yen in price? What do you think will happen? If Karuda, the Bank of Japan says, yeah, we're going to get, the Bank of Japan, yeah, says, comes out today or tomorrow and says, we are going to look to hike rates. The market, yeah, and you're right, yeah, stronger yen, right? The market has to then price in, yeah, because this is price, yeah, has to price in what the yen's valuation with a potential rate hike, yeah? So although the dollar, we know the dollar is king at the moment, right? It is the king, it's got the crown, yeah, that's a crown. The yen is making a comeback, which means that in this day in history, yeah, before I was in last crowned, okay, I was going to put some jewels on it as well. There we are, some diamonds, some stars. Anyways, so in this day in history today, yeah, the market is pricing in the valuation of what they think the dollar yen is, right? So at the moment it's pulled back a bit, so it's probably worth between, you know, what is it, one, two, five? Yeah, and one, where was it? Was it 120? I think it was like 120 or 121, something like that. There was maybe about 4,500 pips, yeah? So again, that's an auction, right? But if the, if Karuda comes out tomorrow and says, we're looking to hike rates, the market then has to decide and say, oh, well, yesterday, yeah, we thought that the yen was valued at this price, but now the yen has to be valued probably somewhere here because the yen has to get what's stronger, right? It has to be valued maybe between the 118 and the 112, who knows? Yeah, 118 and maybe 112, 113, what's wrong with me today? All right, so it doesn't mean, it doesn't mean that, you know, the dollar is the weaker out of the two or 116, yeah. And you're absolutely right, Alexander, you buy the rumour, right? So you're buying the rumour, the market has to then price in, it has to price in what Karuda and what the yen's valuation, if they go from 0.1, or so minus 0.1% to 0, for example. Well, it depends on how much he's, if he's extra hawkish and saying that he might go to, you know, maybe 0.1%, right? Who knows? But the point being is that the market then has to price that in, yeah? Doesn't mean that the fundamentals don't work, it just means that the, you know, the valuation has to be readjusted because new information has come in about the valuation and future valuation of the yen. Does that all make sense, guys? Yeah. So rather than, for example, prices diverging as they, as they were, yeah, what you're, what you're having is there's actually prices are starting to converge. Yeah, you have a converging, actually converging is more like this, right? Where you have, you know, a strong currency or an appreciated currency that generally is going to get weaker when the weak currency goes stronger, right? But the gap between, you know, at one point it was quite wide. Now the gap between them actually is smaller between the divergences, which then, like I said, plays itself out like this. Yeah. So there's, there are opportunities. I don't like taking that type of trade personally. Just me, just, just, just me, you know, and my personal bias, don't like taking that type of trade. There are traders that do and that can and that will. Good luck to you, right? That is an opportunity and I wouldn't say not to do it. I can't tell you what to do with your hard earned money. But what I can say is, is that that is a trade idea. Because like I said, in this day in history, the market is valuing the dollar yen at that with the information that it has. As soon as that information changes, yeah, then how can, how can the dollar yen be valued at this price or around that price? If, for example, the yen is now looking to, they're looking to appreciate their currency, it can't be, it can't stay up here. And it won't stay up there. They have to revalue that currency. So it's a constant balance and revaluing that needs to go on. And the only way that we know that these things are going to happen is obviously by understanding inflation, interest rates. And as long as you've got, you know, and GDP, and if you are, as long as you understand that that relationship, then you'll always be fine. You will always be okay. Will you win every single trade? No, of course not, because no one knows the exact, you know, no one can always predict the exact point of where the market is going to turn. It's impossible, right? But we know the general direction of travel that prices should go in if we understand the bigger picture. So yeah, very interesting talk. And I wasn't planning on doing that, but it makes sense when you look at the Citibank analysis. So looking at Citibank, nothing really has changed.