 At that time we were really a young team and everybody was looking at what the others are doing. And we were also very much impressed at the time by the board member, Pado Skjoppa, who really took all the young colleagues very seriously. He had monthly meetings with us asking us, how can we bring Europe forward? And what are your ideas? And I have to say that people at the time were really fully convinced of the Euro of Europe and had been the pioneers of creating the Euro. They really gave us a lot of enthusiasm and a lot of kind of energy. And it was very, I mean, we were very privileged to work with these kind of people at the time. My first day at ECB was the 4th of January 1999. So I started with the Euro, I had taken out my starter kit and that was the first day, so to speak, we could pay in cash. And that was the first time I came to the Euro Tower. And I worked at the time, it was called the European Relations Department. And our job was to basically help position the ECB in the Brussels context with the other union institutions. And one of the things we did is to prepare the first meeting of the Eurogroup, to prepare the first meeting of the Economic Financial Committee, the first hearing of the president in the European Parliament. And it was of course very exciting because, as you know, an institution usually asks, how did we do it last time? Well, for us, there was no last time. And at the same time, we know that in the future, this institution will look back and say, how did we do it last time? And so everything we did did not have a precedent, but we did set a precedent with the kind of things that we did. That was very exciting.