 Jessica Russett from Fig Live for you now. Jessica, welcome to the show. I mean, look, we talked the other day about new supply in the bond space this week. The bond auctions. How do we sort of digest these just in the last few hours? The 30-year bonds that went off on Tuesday. Was there sort of that anticipated demand that shot through or there was a bit of a sitting on the sidelines? Good afternoon, Carlson. Thanks for having me. Yeah, that's right. The 30-year, it was a 12 billion 30-year auction that was actually met with quite strong demand actually. On Monday night, there was a three and 10-year yield auction and that three-year was met with stronger demand than what the 10-year was. But it seems these longer dated bonds last night, the 30-year was actually met with stronger demand in the secondary market. That yield on the 30-year dropped a basis point on demand and it got away the 30-year at 2.87%. So that was quite lower than where it has previously. The bid-to-cover ratio on that was at 2.3 as well which was at the higher end of where the last average for the last six auctions have been. Jessica, unfortunately, having to pull away unexpectedly but thank you as always and I know you're in calm down moment we'll look forward to reconnecting with you on the other side as they say of the Fed's two-day policy meeting.