 Good morning. Boeing, the airplane builder, has risen to an all-time high after they said that they want to build less 777, but they also said that they want to pay out more dividend and have more buybacks and that has driven the stock to an all-time high. Right now, the Dow Jones industrial average is so overboard as it has only been four other times in the past 100 years. If you look at the relative strength index, it's just shot up into the overbought area with the Trump rally. Friday, we will have a quad-witching day, which is the quarterly-witching day with options and futures contracts expiring. The normal range from the low to the high of the week will be 2.98% or have been 2.98% on average for the S&P 500 in the past decade. So, price for more volatility, the Federal Reserve will meet today and it will be very interesting to hear the opinion of Fed Chair Yellen in her press conference, which will be 30 minutes after the Fed announcement this evening. It will be very interesting to hear what she will have to say about inflation spiking over the Fed targets. Will she tolerate it or will she do something against it? Everybody in the market expects that she will hike rates by 25 basis points, so why not do a 50 basis point hike? That's a big topic. Everybody or at least most of the traders are somewhat ignoring that there will be a Fed meeting where the Fed is hiking rates this evening. Everybody's really talking about that. Everybody's talking about the rally. Everybody's talking about stocks that go up. Everybody's talking about Trump and the forecast on his economic policies. So that is dangerous because as I said in the past it has just spiked some meaningful volatility. The AD line, that's the advanced decline line in the S&P 500 is showing a divergence. The S&P 500 for standard equities in the United States, so that's the broad market, broad Wall Street, has made higher highs. It's gone to all time highs as we know, but the number of stocks and equities actually participating from that advance are going down. So that is a divergence. That's a bearish signal from technical analysis standpoint. Gallup on that is from the real economy. Some numbers has seldom seen such a spike in economic confidence where are at a nine year high in economic confidence in the United States. So yes, it might very well be that Trump has changed the behavior of consumers and has changed the behaviors, especially of companies. The missing piece of the puzzle that central banks are trying or have tried to stimulate in the past decade or so was investments from companies, corporate investments. And if Trump really, at least for the United States, has achieved with a change in sentiment that corporations invest again, that would be a big, big win for the US economy and could also stimulate world growth.