 Good afternoon, everybody. I'm Tommy O'Brien, coming to you live from TfN Headquarters in St. Petersburg, Florida, 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, final hour of the trading day. And we've got markets hanging around negative territory almost where they've been all day. Dow off 142 points, trading at $26,779. We've got the S&Ps at negative 17 points, trading at 2973, both the Dow and the S&P off just more than about half a percent. And then you get over to the NASDAQ down about 0.8% or 68 points in the negative, trading at $8,093. And the Russell actually leading the way down more than a full percent or off 16 points at $1559. We'll start things off. Let's jump over to the future markets. We'll start it off with the Dow currently trading $26,780 on that chart. And as you can see, I mean, we want to talk about a tight trading range, folks. Since about 10.30 this morning, we've been sitting in about a 40-point Dow trading range from, call it, $26,800 being the top, $26,760 being the bottom, and we're square right in the middle of that, $26,780. NASDAQ 100, a little bit of a different story. We trade lower on the opening bell. We'll jump over to Apple in a moment. Apple getting a downgrade, down about 2% at one point. We've got the NASDAQ 100, trading at $7806. We'll see if Apple's getting a little bit of a bounce as the NASDAQ 100 has. S&P is trading at $29,77. Again, pretty calm day. We've been under $29,80 since about 11.30 this morning, and we haven't even gotten below $29,74. So you're talking about only six S&P points over the last three and a half hours for a trading range. Crude oil, different story. Check out that run. So from $8.30 this morning, trade from $57,32 up to $58,40. We were sitting at $58 within the last almost half hour, and then Crude falling out of bed a little bit, trading from $58. These are five minute bars we're looking at. We're now trading at $57,45. Goal contract volatility as well. Sunday night, we're trading at $13,96. We trade all the way up to $1,409. We're currently back under $1,400 at $1,399. And the Euro-US dollar trading $1,112,12. As I mentioned it, Apple getting a downgrade from Rosenblatt to sell on fundamental deterioration. Some of the other headlines, Deutsche Bank shares slumping more than 7% as the lender gets ready for a major overhaul. 18,000 jobs cut by 2022, and you're talking about 7.4 billion euros. It's going to cost them to square that away. And to jump over to those two, started off with Apple. They had down about 2.09%, and Deutsche Bank, 6% now had been down a little bit more, but trading at $7.50, $7.54. Stay tuned, folks. We're going to treat Larry Pezzamento filling in for Tom O'Brien live from 3-4. Have a great Monday.