 And as we go, we're up about 35 points on the S&P cash, so we're going to watch the Fed numbers are out at the moment or breaking. So we'll see how that actually ends up being something or maybe anything for that. So it'd be kind of interesting. As far as consumer stocks, if they happen to be in the electronics section of the store and you're invested in them, you may want to start thinking about the consumer electronic show which starts tomorrow in Las Vegas. Tesla looks like it's made a low. We talked a little bit about that on the show yesterday. We've got a few other things going on besides the Fed minutes, which will keep kind of a close eye on. And that is, well, fun buying, really starts coming in around this period of time. And it's probably going to be abbreviated maybe a couple of days. I didn't think that there was a huge amount. I thought more of it would come in probably after two than before. Maybe the numbers leaked or someone told them something. But I was looking for a fairly bullish week to round this out. I'm also kind of looking at a great deal of television from CNBC to Bloomberg this morning. And wow, I can't find anybody that thinks the market's going higher. And guess what? Generally the market goes higher when everybody thinks that the market's going lower. You got to have somebody on the opposite side or you probably have some kind of low. I don't know how long that's going to last. I suspect late into January, though. You may still have a bear case for the rest of the year. As many times on my show, I've brought up the fact that even in a bear market, the market's probably going up three-fourths of the time on a daily basis. You need to really trigger those times where it really has the massive slide. The reality is that navigating financial markets can be risky. Markets can be chaotic and difficult to understand.