 And the world of TFNN, let's get over to our man, Mr. Dave Mazza. Dave, folks, is the head of product at Direction. And also a managing director. And let me tell you something, folks, you're going to be protecting yourself because this is a rough market. So Dave, first off, thank you for coming on. We have quite a market here. And the bottom line is that it's been a one-way market on the way down. And I mean, as you come over to our website, folks, the Direction banner's right there. You can hit that banner. And you can take a look at the different types of products that Direction has. We haven't had a market like this in quite a while, Dave. Yeah, you're exactly right. And look, I think one of the last times I was on, you were talking about the ABC structure that we were seeing with the S&P 500. I mean, has that not played out? But a bottom line, so kudos to that call. But bottom line is that this market is having a hard time finding some footing. And I think what's interesting is that financial conditions, which is a measure of credit spreads, equity markets, what's happening with the Fed, to try to quantify all that really aren't yet at a stress point. So I think when you're hearing calls for a further correction of seven, eight, maybe 10%, it's not implausible. So I think this environment is one where people have to stay nimble. And particularly just today, the inflows that we're seeing into SPDN, which is our inverse 1x fund for the S&P 500, which is kind of that direct hedging pool, are really high. Again, logical, people want to take some risk off the table. But I think it's hard directionally to identify what areas in the market are going to do well going forward, which is I think why we're starting to see, with fears of 50 basis points, maybe 75 rate hikes, people are just taking their chips off the table and waiting until we get to this May meeting, and in the meantime, dealing with all these earnings that are coming out. There's no doubt. And when Dave was just talking about that one-to-one ETF folks on the S&P, this is something that you really want to understand. What happens is that you don't have to hedge your whole portfolio. But what happens, let's say, whether it's 50,000, 100,000, 200,000, you can say that, OK, even on a daily basis, you're going delta-neutral. That's my point more than anything, folks, OK? And you don't want to make sure you understand what you're doing, but the fact of the matter is a delta-neutral strategy right now is not bad. I mean, you can do that as an insurance policy. That's what it really comes down to. Yeah. No, it's a great way to put it. The other interesting thing I'll say is that, and someone used this conversation earlier today, you're going long to go short in this particular case, to your point. If you have, and most people are generally net long, right? Yes. Particularly for trading. And it's a way where I can maybe continue to have the positions I want to have on, whether they're individual stocks or just the broad-based index, and kind of use part of my portfolio to hedge out some risk. And that tool, and giving you that one-to-one inverse exposure on it, again, it's still a daily product. People need to understand that. Exactly. But to give you that kind of daily hedge can be pretty effective. Because, yeah, like I said, it's hard to read the tea leaves in this particular market because just the number one, all the uncertainty that exists geopolitically, coupled with these macro headwinds that we're facing and what the Fed may do, and earnings have been good, net net, but maybe not good enough really to get that confidence back. We'll see. Again, I mean, ask anyone. This week's going to be super important with Alphabet tonight, Amazon, Apple later in the week. And frankly, if they're not shooting the lights out, I think that the negative momentum and the bearers are going to kind of continue to be in charge here, at least until we get to that Fed meeting. No, there's no doubt. Now, I want to change gears on you, and I'm not sure whether you can speak about this, but if we could just speak about that, I was, there's been a lot of articles out, actually, that Direction is going to beat the other two larger funds with ETFs and leverage ETFs inside of the Bitcoin market. Well, they may, OK? Because the bottom line is, so is this something you can talk about on the air, maybe? Yes, so we filed for a fund that effectively would offer the inverse exposure to Bitcoin. Can't speak to if that is going to be available or when that's going to be available. But a similar idea, and I think in this market, it's been difficult to find anything to hold up well. Bitcoin has been challenged. Oil's obviously having a bit of a better today, but there's been days where commodities have been whacked just alongside of that. So what we're thinking of is continuing to provide tools really for tactical traders to either have that ability to outperform, but also increasingly trying to bring tools for people to hedge their portfolio. And this would be one of those similar to, we talked about, SPDN. So traders stay nimble, but stay active, because it's going to be, I think, brought down at least for the next couple of weeks. No, exactly. And listen, congratulations, because that was a great move. And we're going to get this explained on the air, because pretty cool, man. Really cool. You have a great one, a safe one day. If we look forward to speaking to two weeks from yesterday. Thank you. Have a great one, have a safe one.