 Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with Christopher Eccleston from Moulton Metals. How are you today? Very well. Thank you. Newly listed, three weeks on the market, 17 million shares outstanding. Tell me why as an investor out there looking at everything out there, Christopher, the top three reasons why I should put Moulton Metals on my radar list. Okay. The first is, oh, they're actually production, production, production. The old real estate slogan is relevant to us because we're totally dedicated to production. We're not interested in pulling around. We're not interested in spending an enormous number of years and amounts of money on exploration. We just want to get to production because the prices are up and we want to harvest those prices. So you were talking earlier in investor talk about being the quiet achiever. Can you tell us what you mean and tell me a little bit more about the timeline we should anticipate in the next quarter, for instance? Okay. Well, you know, we had a very low key entrance to the market. We didn't do an IPO. It was just an introduction to the market. We did not want to say too much about what we were doing. One was because we didn't want to get stumped by other people moving into space. We feel relatively comfortable about that now because it seems like not that many people know enough about Intimidia sort of getting in front of us in the way that this is in the rare earth boom of 10 years ago. So many people want to be sort of like piled in on top of the first few movers. So we have first mover and we want to be eventually in five years from now the largest non-Chinese producer of antimony. And at the moment we are the only non-Chinese listed minor dedicated to antimony. Well, if first mover advantage doesn't get you excited, I want to remind everybody at Investor Intel that Christopher Eccleston happens to be, if not the top analyst in the critical mineral sector. So let me ask you, are you going to be doing a research report on molten metals? No, I will not. One company I won't cover, the market will have to rely upon me speaking about the company but I can't prognosticate in the way I usually do so once my hands are tied. So you're putting your name and reputation behind antimony and molten metals, is that correct? Yes, indeed. It's very frustrating for a long while that I've covered antimony and there have been so few companies to actually cover and some of the ones that were around have disappeared. So it sort of left the field open and very tempting but while the prices were down it was not attractive and now that the price is $13,500 a tonne after a long term, you know, decades of being $2,500 a tonne, it's a pretty good moment to be in antimony. Well for everybody out there we're just going to get you interested in going to the website to learn more about molten metals and if you want more information send it to Christopher Eccleston. Thank you Christopher. Thank you very much.