 So, Bundy, let's talk a little about Fenechia. Hey, thanks for having me. So, what is the main focus of the company? But we're building effectively an asset management business and the asset management business, as you know, is attractive because you get recurring fee streams and you get a profit upside. And that's really a reflection of the assets under management. So, we're building an AUM business that's focused on either liquid assets out there or illiquid assets that have a more of a longer term view in terms of the value realization. The liquid side is what's reflected in our recent announcements around an ETN business. ETN is effectively an exchange-traded note, very similar to an ETF except the difference is it's not a fund, it's a collateralized note. So, you put money into assets and you issue investor loan notes against that. We've been building that business now for the past year and a half and the plumbing to get a very big business has been part of the activity of the company the last few months. We have a startup attitude towards it and when you're building something big, it's like a giant flywheel. It takes a while to build a big flywheel, but once you get it ready, every turn covers a lot of ground. So, we're in that process of putting the finishing touches on that giant flywheel at our end. And you can see some indications of what's coming to the pike there, right? We recently announced a partnership with FTSE Russell, which is a index pricing provider for us. And they would only partner with someone that they're very comfortable with. They've done the due diligence on and they know they're almost something big. For them to provide this pricing to us in many cases, some things are provided on an exclusive basis is something we want to have because it kind of lends credence to our integrity, right? There's integrity in pricing, there's integrity in our activity here and that should make it very comfortable for institutional participation, which is what we're targeting. So, I would say in terms of building, we have this liquid asset strategy with the ETNs and we have plans for enhancing our private company participation on the illiquid side, which we've done so far with balance sheet-based investments and now formalizing that with a venture fund that we recently announced called Feneke Glass Lipper Ventures. Okay. And so, on the ETN side of the business, for investors who may not know the difference between an ETN, extraneous traded note and an ETF, with the note, do they get some advantage of getting regular dividend payments or are they just holding more of a securitized note in the fund? Great question. So, typically, there's two differences there. One is, as a fund, you have concentration limits. So, the whole idea for a fund is to distribute your risk across a portfolio of investments. If you wanted to create, for example, an instrument that only had Bitcoin, then you typically can't do that, at least in Europe as a fund, because you're only holding Bitcoin as an asset. You do that as a note because then you can have car concentration in one type of asset. So, if you wanted a single coin instruments, then having an ETN structure allows for that. That's the primary advantage. The second one is exactly what you said. We're looking at not just having an instrument that tracks the price movement of an underlying digital asset, but we're looking to get yield generation from those assets, from the deployment of the assets and decentralized finance protocols and or staking, and that yield generation has been passed back to the note holder in the form of a yield, or as you alluded to earlier. And that is much more feasible as a structured note rather than as a fund. And with these funds, what sort of asset classes are you targeting? You've mentioned sort of crypto assets in your discussion, but what exactly will you be looking at to invest in with the fund when you raise your capital? So, we'll have a series of products. So, we've got approval now in the European economic area, which is the European Union's 27 members plus three other countries in Europe. So, we've got a pretty big footprint where we can market and promote these financial products. And we'll look to put out a set of different products, a series of products, if you may, which will in some cases be single notes, single coin notes with a single digital asset, where you can basically say, look, if we have deployment in this protocol, we can predict certain bands of yield generation based on the deployment of that coin and decentralized finance. So, it could be single coin ETNs or a basket, which is generally thematic. That could be around an environmental theme or it could be around a certain portfolio of top 20 coins and creating a basket of different tokens that underpin that specific note issuance. Our prospectus gives us some flexibility to do what we like in that space. We can create single currency ETNs or multi-currency ETNs. Anything that's based on digital asset is treated as a collective for our militant's purposes. Now, in the marketplace right now, when you're looking at cryptocurrencies, we've seen a lot of high-profile bankruptcies and issues, but we've also seen Bitcoin go back up to the $30,000 mark. And so there has to be some interest in this digital financing and this alternate financing out there. So, how do you see your positioning for everyday investors for your products when you see this headline news? I've been in this digital asset industry for the past nearly 10 years, and I can probably count 17 times when it was like, okay, this is a write-off, this is going nowhere, it's just monopoly money, what have you. And every time it's bounced back and typically bounces back to a higher peak than it had in the past. So, we're in this for the long call. We believe in a paradigm shift taking place in the economy with the creation of a digital asset economy. And we don't believe that this is something that's stoppable and we believe the adoption curve is continuing despite challenges. And the challenges are in some ways compressed cycle times. We took the securities industry 100 years to evolve with the Great Depression and people are losing a lot of money at one point or with the banking industry, not just the Lehman moment that we experienced about 15 years ago, but also more recently things like Silicon Valley Bank and even hopefully yesterday's headlines in the past weeks. So, that doesn't mean that the banking industry itself is going to capsize. So similarly, I think because this is a nascent industry, it has attracted let's say less than proper players. And the takeout in the industry is very healthy because it's separating the good from the bad and it's healthy for the industry long term as much as it's painful in the short term. So, what we're seeing now is people who are participating in this place are very serious, very sincere. They're not just for the flash, they're able to build sustainable business models and real world applications. And that's what we were attracted to. So, for us, this is a time to get into the market. The market's a bit depressed. It's not $10,000 for Bitcoin, but it's also not $60,000. So, it's past a certain threshold and the indications are that this is going to continue for the long term. So, this is a time for us to build and for people to buy. So, in your business model as an asset manager, you're looking at and the relationships you're building, you're trying to basically do almost a regulated entity in an unregulated market. Is that the correct vision for investors like myself who may want to feel more secure in the investment? Absolutely. For us, the fact that we're regulated, the fact that we're listed, we have our parent company that's listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange. We have ETNs or Effective League Exchange trading notes. We're looking at listing them on certain European stock exchanges. The combination of that and being regulated out of Canada and, of course, our ETN's prospectus has been approved by the regulator in Europe gives people transparency and comfort. You want to participate in this digital asset economy. Question is, what's going on there? Who do we trust there? Who do we trust with our money to deploy in a growing asset class? Well, we look at multiple participants in this area. We look at Layer 1, Layer 2, Layer 3. Protocols that are in development will travel and meet people as much as we look at what's happening on chain in terms of activity. That combined with a filtering process by a team that looks at what products we take to market is what we're there for. We're doing it through the umbrella of a reputable regulator and a reputable exchange. Great. To wrap things up here, maybe for investors, you can just give a couple of quick bullet points of what they can expect to see from a news flow for the next couple of months. Yeah. I mean, I feel very careful obviously because I don't want to give out any kind of forwarding statements. So, you know, that's with that caveat. What I would say is that, look, we're building a formidable business on the exchange trade and outside. We haven't gone with the philosophy of building. They will come or we haven't gone with the pure copycat philosophy. We're learning from the mistakes of the others and coming out with more products that are more innovative than anything that's been out there in the past. And we have only gone to the market having validated that with investors engaged, quantifiable investor interest. So, for us going out there, we'll be with committed participation within our line of sight. And you'll see the effects and the ramifications of that pretty soon when the actual products are in the market. Well, great. Thanks, Fundy, for your time today. Absolutely. Thank you again, Chris.