 Match! Can we look at Beyond Mead or Match? I follow both of them, right? Beyond Meads is hitting a bottom. Match is, by the way, since you brought up match, match is the only stock that the family has calls on that is betting that it's going to go up. Beyond Mead family had calls on as well but there was a little bump that happened and family sold out of that. Okay, but if you want those let me bring them up. Let me set up the things. We'll take a look at match and let's bring it up here as well. I hate websites that do, you don't want them to do refresh, they automatically do it. I don't know why they set it up like that. Match. Match. Okay, let me change the view. Let me bring up the chat. Cheryl, there are a bunch of local places that have signs saying they are cashless or only take cars but if you ask they will take cash might be worth asking to spread the word that people want it. Yeah, indeed. Pennsylvania, okay. Cheryl, if you don't mind me asking about that. Yeah, when this whole thing happened there were a few places that were not taking cash. One of them was local and I boycotted them for a year afterwards because I didn't want to spend my money there. So here's match. It's up five cents today. Okay, let's take a look at the charts for it. Let's take a look at the one-year chart for it. Okay, so it's sitting well below the 50-day moving average and 200-day moving average. There is a trend that's pointing on the downside but if you draw a line from here to here to here, there could be possibly a downside to it but it broke its down trajectory here. So you could draw a lot of lines to get a feel for what the stock is doing. So this is the one-year chart. Here's the two-year chart. Okay, here's the two-year chart. Based on the two-year chart, this could drop a lot more. Okay, this could drop a lot more. And here's a five-year chart. Here's the five-year chart. Based on the five-year chart, it could drop a lot more. Take a look at match. In 2018-17, it was sitting at $16 right now sitting at $133. And let's take a look at the overview on this. It's sitting at a P of 67. Okay, it's got a beta of 0.66. I don't even know how to pronounce this. This is basically accounting practices, you know what they're announcing. It's 700 and 800. That's really good. Not bad. Not bad. You can go here. I won't go there but you can also take a look at the options on it. So let's take a look at the options for let's say February. Here's the options for February for match. So February 18th, it costs, it's sitting at $133 right? So it's between $130 and $135. It's sitting between $130 and $135. Oh, where'd it go? We're going to go back to February again. Let's go to February. So sitting between $130 and $135 and $133 right? Let's look at the straddle on this. So sleepy waves. Let's make a note on this. Let's assume you're going to assume that match is going to do big movement by February, a week and three months. You couldn't buy a put, let's say at $920 that you have the right to sell match at $135 right? And you couldn't buy a call for match for $1055 that gives you right to buy it at $130 right? So put these together. So one, let's say you're going to straddle it. You're going to bet that it's both going to go up and down. So $1055 plus $920, $9.2. So it's going to cost you $19 right? Or $2,000 really right? But let's assume it's going to cost you $20 which is $2,000 right? So if you put $2,000 into this right? It means you're buying a put, the right to sell it at $35 and a right to buy it at $30. You need this stock to go down right? So if you're putting $20 you need to be at $115 right? Oh no don't go don't go don't go. I got to stop doing that. So are we in February or February? Okay right? So we're here right? So you need it to be at least for the put okay or for the call. You need the stock to be at least trading at $115 for you to break even right? So that's $20 above this. So take a look at this thing. At $135 right now if you go $20 above this it's at $155 right? At $155 it's trading at $23. $23.50 let's say right? So there's a $3 premium there relative to what it would be if it was expiring today right? Relatively speaking because it's $133 right? Or you need it to be above $150 here for you to break even on February 18th right? Because if you go $20 less than this you're at $110 you're sitting at $24 $25 right? So one way you can get a feel for how much the time value premium is on a certain option is take a look at the option of what it would cost, what it would give you, what you would lose if it was expiring today and look at what it is whenever the time frame is that you're buying it. For us we're looking at February 18th okay? Is that clear? That's one way of looking at this.