 What's going on, Tigers? This is Jacob Shoup. Today we have a nice upmarket, the DIA going straight up from the morning, NDX, similar kind of pattern. The Q's, similar as well, and GDX has been cooking recently, and that is at the expense of the DXY, so the dollar essentially. As someone mentioned in the den, it had been, you know, I mean from this morning, I mean we really had a steep decline going on here. It went down past the 101 mark, was kind of flirting with 100 in general, really tried for the past few hours to get back up over that 101 mark, and it did, and we'll see if that holds into the rest of the day, but the dollar has been getting absolutely smoked. That's obviously great for gold. So we'll see what that kind of has in store. You look at steel dynamics, so it did end up, let me see here, just do your date. It did end up testing that level, like we were saying the other week, and then it did reject it, but it's not on a lot of volume. It might get back down to that area, and we'll see what happens. You know, as I always say, I love trading this stock quite a bit, and so we'll see. Steel's also at, I guess, like a cyclical high for the industry right now, so it may be, I don't know if I would ever suggest right now is a good time to get into steel in general, just because of the cyclical nature of the industry, but it is making that nice, you know, it tested rejected, it'll probably retest again, so. It's interesting is Volvo has knocked it out of the park today. Truck maker Volvo post record Q1 as sales and margins beat forecasts. Post 45% jump in preliminary Q1 earnings. Their EBIT is at 18.4 billion crowns versus, I mean, that knocked their forecasts out of the park. Full earnings will be on April 20th, and it's a nice little bump in it. They've been really focusing a lot on making, I mean, they have forever, but cars, excuse me, trucks, cargo and all that, and they've done quite well. They're also doing decently regarding like the EV market as well, so it'll be interesting to follow along and kind of see what happens with them. In some news, I know Twitter is no longer publicly traded, but there has been some interesting stuff going on. Twitter announced earlier that they're going to merge with eToro, not merge with eToro, but rather have an eToro plug-in for their application. So let me see here. Hold this over for y'all. This is neat. I mean, this headline says it pushes app into finance, but really what it is, I think Musk wants this to be a one and done place where you stop, right? And this is also the concept in general with like Web 3, okay, and not familiar with like what Web 3 is. The way that it would, you know, practically be implemented is it's a one place to go. So Reddit kind of tried to run with that as like the front page of the internet a while ago, but obviously there's, you know, it's just really a message board at the end of the day, a forum board. Twitter with Musk implementing this is it's huge. So I mean, you'll be able to trade stocks based on it. You'll be able to trade crypto on it. Twitter has a really cool kind of feature essentially where if you put a money sign in front of a ticker, it'll link it. It's like a hashtag but for stocks. So and this is interesting too, is it's coming in at a time where, how do you call it? Of course, I'm blanking on the name of it. Give me a second. The, it's basically like a medium where you post articles in behind paywalls, but anyways they came out yesterday saying that they were going to compete with Twitter and allowing, you know, kind of short form and then message scroll down board. So Twitter has also announced that they're going to be implementing something called monetization where you can put your posts essentially behind a paywall, which will be massive. Again, not publicly traded, but what I think is interesting about this is, you know, I haven't been on Twitter in a long time, but I've recently been on TFNN's Twitter and I've noticed that you have long form posts now on it and this is getting away from the core of what Twitter was and kind of how it barred its market share to begin with and I think what that does is it leaves opportunities for smaller platforms that have been trying to compete with Twitter to get a leg in. So in the next few years, it might be interesting to see things like Mastodon and some other message boards that have tried to, excuse me, social media apps that have tried to emulate original Twitter and they'll see how they kind of get a percentage of the market share out of it. But it is pretty interesting to see this kind of development for it and I think really like this is the future for a lot of these major tech platforms, all your social media platforms are going to need to start integrating, I mean this kind of competition here, they're going to need to start integrating more and more features. Facebook did it with Marketplace which is pretty huge in a way of like cutting down eBay a little bit in some capacity, not in every way, but you know this kind of diversification of what the platform does and what you're allowed to do is pretty interesting. So let's see, obviously CPI was lower yesterday which is huge, but one of the things that was interesting to me is when you read the CPI, we'll get more into this when we come back, but you had fuel, oil, and gasoline extremely low, I mean you had massive negative growth for them and this was waiting CPI quite a bit. Not much else was budging and what I'm concerned about in some ways and I obviously couldn't be entirely wrong on this, but with the new OPEC cuts and we might not see it until after May, but we you know might end up getting higher gas, I mean we've deployed gas prices, we've deployed a lot of the strategic reserves already, especially in March which obviously none of this OPEC revelation came to light until April and through March there was a deployment of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, see if I can pull it up for you, right about here and this was in March and so whether or not that's you know suppressed prices greatly at the pump you know we'll stand to see with the increase in OPEC and again we'll talk about this a little bit more when we come back, we might not see too much increase until after May as what the Saudis do essentially is form contracts a few months out for delivery of supply, we'll talk about that a little more folks, stay tuned we'll be right back. Currencies, commodities and bond markets are as important as ever right now with how the-