 So just coming up to 10 o'clock then 24th of March 2021 and it was just going to have a quick comment on the Aussie dollar. And it's something I'm watching which I wanted to comment on because there's a few things going on on a broader top level geopolitical level, namely that of US and China, which I'll go into explanation of in a moment The key theme being is that Kiwi dollar and Aussie dollar are trading it in a very similar pattern of late understand me. So the entity and currencies do tend to mimic each other to a certain degree over that region. Now, before I look at the Aussie and going to that in detail, the interesting thing about the Aussie here is that this is looking at a daily continuation and that market has held on its 100 DMA, which was the previous Feblos. So it's held up a key level of technical relevance. The Kiwi has broken that level. Now the Kiwi was set up in exactly the same way. You've got the round handle, you've got 71, you've got the March Feblos year to date lows in that pair. And then you had that news come out just the last 48 hours where they're looking to tackle the ongoing kind of housing crisis in New Zealand and that was the news catalyst for weakness in their domestic currency. And that was a trigger point which has led to a decent, a decent move lower, you know, over a full point now in that last kind of day or so, and actually technically if you look at it, we closed yesterday below in the Kiwi the November December lows. And that being the round figure of 70. So I think technically that's quite interesting still has a fairly bearish setup there. So this is almost, for me, a litmus test of what we could see here. Now for here then the straw that broke the Kiwi back was a news catalyst on the housing market earlier this week. For the Kiwi, what could that for the Aussie what could the news catalyst be? Because I think if we get a break here, I think we get a further extension of that price decline and perhaps targeting lower levels. 74, you know, a decent near two point move could be on the cards over a multiple day situation. Amid the dollar strength we're seeing. So you get into a spread. So before we get to that the main thing then I'm watching for and then you talk maybe a little bit about this is that there's this ongoing friction at the moment between US and China. Now as I discussed in the briefing, that friction is leading to then hostilities increasing on the Korean Peninsula. Now, historically through episode of 2018-19 when Trump, before he broke a peace agreement with North Korea, what was happening was an increased intensification of ballistic missile testing coming out of North Korea. Now, what tended to happen there was that North Korea is an issue that really is quite unsolvable for the US, because they cannot militarily intervene in that region. There's been an immediate reaction from China. So what do they need to do that the US needs to work and lean on China to control them the peninsula situation. It's very important then for strategic relationships within a very contested region, because the US has important allies in Japan and South Korea of which they have then paralleled military bases situated with these nations. It's very important there for their military geographically to have a home base there. And so that's why those relationships quite key. Now what's happening here is we have the first level top level Alaska meeting between first time Bidens administration and G team, as we know that had a pretty frosty reception to kick things off. The thing that I'm watching here, and the reason why I'm looking at the Kiwi as a potential example, the catalyst here it could be a retaliatory effect through the proxy of Australia that China could penalize the Aussies through what's called the quad. The quad is the new group now that Biden has formed with basically Japan, India and Australia. So US, Japan, India and Australia are now called the quad. And the quad have a unity formed on the basis of anti China, basically, or protectionism against China. Now this is problematic for Australia obviously because Australia is almost entirely dependent on expectation of raw materials to China. China then could play out then then express in a proxy against the US further penalizing Australia on say coal imports or things of that matter, which they've already done multiple times in recent months and years. And so one thing I'm looking out for here is North Korea ramping it up. What you can have then is when you're having these ongoing negotiations, you can then have this kind of, you kind of leveraged position where you know what the US want, and then you can say, okay, you've just got a stronger hand to play if you're the Chinese so here then I'd say there's a probability of a moderate outlook that Australia could get hit with some kind of Chinese retaliatory measure, and that could be the straw that breaks that Aussie. And what we saw with the key we was, we were a key strategic technical level, a break means we spill over, and we start to fall quite quickly in the Aussie under those conditions. And, you know, COVID gets worse. That's fine. China is a manufacturer exporter. But if the world declines the customer declines will the activity needs to decelerate a little bit short term if we do get a COVID wave. And so that in itself is already going to impede, let's say short term demand for a lot of those material based materials out of Aussie. You throw this in the mix. And short term it could be a key catalyst to look for.