 We had Chairman Powell come out and have a little talk and a little speech at about noon. And we had something we haven't had for a while and that is that the option market makers and some others had decided to go delta-neutral a day early. If you haven't listened to my show, I talk about it regularly, but for monthly options the decay of the option is so little in the last seven, eight days of the actually seven trading days after the Wednesday before the major monthly options expiration that there's a huge amount of risk for those option writers. So what they'll do is they'll either put on or take off or add a short or long position on the other side to make sure that the delta, i.e. the change in their account doesn't move very much. It's not going to move not at all, but for the most part they can get it down to where it's maybe a half a percent. Usually, well that was going to be tomorrow, I was kind of looking for it. I didn't think that Powell would have actually a lot to say today, but I think they use that as an excuse for what he said because I didn't see anything in there that really changed the trajectory of the market. He may have been just a tad softer than maybe even last Wednesday at the Fed meeting, but I didn't think that there was much there. So what do we have? Well we have markets that were severely down or down, well not severely down. We were down a little bit, then we went and went whole hog higher, and then we totally reversed back to being about flat on the market. I think the S&P is down two points today. So you just have to watch and learn, but this is a bear market, and you get these kind of massive pops higher and they instantly fizzle, and that kind of tells you that you are in that bear market. You don't really get that kind of stuff to the downside because there's always people wanting to buy in a bull market. Anyway, we'll be back in a few minutes, we'll discuss this and a whole lot more.