 not AR related stocks and how well they've done and how well we think it's going to continue to do. They look expensive at the moment, but they're still valuing other parts of the S&P, so now you have a dilemma in the market saying, we're going to ruin the June and July rally, go back to the 4100 level, or other people are saying, nope, they're still esteemed there. You've already mentioned this almost slightly, but what are your thoughts? What do you think we'll head up in the pre-election seasonality area? So I think AI is a big buzzword, but as a trader, who cares, you're looking for momentum. And this is where I kind of say, all right, so who cares if you don't actually like the underlying thing or you think chat GPT isn't actually, you know, worth that much. There's certain uses for AI, but I don't think they're replacing a human for most. I think it's a fantastic way to sort things and find information really, really quickly, but the amount of things that go wrong with it are massive. You know, there's so many mistakes when I've tried to sort of just find a paragraph or a little piece of writing to inspire some thoughts, but that doesn't matter because other people are buying it. You know, at the end of the day, you've got to throw your thoughts away. But I think as a factor of the general market, it is expensive. It is very expensive right now. And funny enough, I think I mentioned about the 12 month trailing price to earnings ratio for the Russell that's been cut in half versus last year, the S&P it's down maybe I think like four points or something like that, but for the Nasdaq, I think it was up like five or six, which shows you that AI as a sector has really, really kept the Nasdaq up, whether it's been via, you know, meta, whether it's been via chips, you know, with with Nvidia or whatever. So it's been a great narrative. It's been a fantastic narrative. And I always think that, you know, if there's, as George Soros said, if there's a bubble by it because bubbles just go up, you know, I do think it runs out of steam. But again, I think the market runs out of steam. If a considerable steam is what I mean, you know, as in, you know, you start seeing those big liquid drop offs, it starts to run out of steam when we start to see unemployment goes back to that it goes back to that because credit spreads are like that and credit spreads are going to be the one thing when that ceases up, probably from unemployment, when people can stop paying stuff, that is when things occur. Because what that implies, what credit spreads basically implies that there's no wages being paid, which means there's unemployment, right? There's there's no facilitation of profit. There's no cash flowing into businesses. They then can't pay their corporate debt and crumbles. And again, want to refer back to the Russell PE ratio, it's been cut in half. So we kind of already seen it. I think, I think there was a period in 2020 when the Russell's PE was actually, no, 2021, sorry, and the Russell's PE was actually negative because most of the firms there weren't making money. So yeah, there's a lot of dying companies out there. But if rates were, you know, lowered quite quickly, they might turn a profit because they're debt cheaper. Yeah. But yeah, credit spreads are very, very important across the whole grade as well from A all the way down to junk, sorry, triple A all the way down to junk. And I think I saw that. So if you were to look at a chart of the basis point pricing of debt, it kind of goes like this. So you've got quite a lot of triple A debt and then it decreases. But when you get down to junk, it's a massive hockey stick again. And that's about 700 to 1000 basis points, I think they're priced at. So was that 7% to 10% yields? There's, yeah, there's basically a lot of crappy debt out there. And, you know, if rates go up again, that will increase it again up to maybe 11%, 12%, that's maybe when things seize up, but who knows?