 Right over to our man, Mr. Dave Mazda. Dave is the head of product and a managing director at Direction Shares. We talk to Dave every two weeks. Dave Mazda, what's going on? Hey, doing well thanks, happy to be back. It's great to have you back. And you know, the ETFs in general, Dave, have got so much publicity. I mean, you know, last couple of years we've got a lot of publicity. But the last week, it's pretty amazing how many stories I've read in the Wall Street Journal about the amount of ETFs that are out there, number one, and that how putting portfolios together, you know, going forward. And it's pretty cool, you know, when you hit the direction ban of folks, what you're going to see is this. I mean, we get ETFs for traders, we get ETFs for investors. And the bottom line is that if you're a, you know, well, we have retail traders. But what seems to have happened, Dave, is this. But the ETFs that you actually have, you can build, you know, a full portfolio and whether we're talking about, you know, the oil business, the biotechs, the going into the future, the thematic ETFs. And then we get the bonds inside there too. So it's pretty cool what has happened inside of the business in general. So can you just talk a little bit about the aspect of, number one, the ETFs that direction does have, and number two, building portfolios with them, you know, it seems to me after reading some of these articles, that's where this whole business is actually going now. Yeah, you're absolutely right. I think what I find remarkable in one of the reasons why ETFs have been getting so much attention in the financial media in the last week is that if you look through the first six months of 2021, yes, there's been more flows into ETFs than the entirety of 2020, which was a record year itself. So in half the period of time, it's already broken that record. And I think the reason why is to your very point, historically, people thought of ETFs as really only for niche exposures, or if I'm a trader, I'll use them to trade and I'll use my mutual funds to invest. Yes. But because ETFs or individual stocks would have you, because ETFs offer such breadth of exposures now, so slice and dicing the equity market in exciting ways like thematic products, you know, in addition to sectors, industries, countries, fixed income, right? So there you can build an entirety of portfolios from treasuries to corpora bonds to senior loan ETFs. And then of course, commodities. So those are, and other alternatives that are coming to market. And I think importantly is that we're not just seeing the growth in the passive kind of selling and forgetting portfolios, which is happening, but we're also seeing growth in our business. In fact, our assets are at all time highs because we're seeing traders use our leverage and inverse ETFs in ways that they haven't before, because we've seen more volatility. One of the areas we've seen significant volatility that we've talked about before, and you noted it just a few minutes ago, is what's going on in the treasury market. So the rate moves that we're seeing in some ways are actually pretty remarkable. You know what's so cool, man, is that, and going forward, folks, okay, the bottom line, you never could get exposure to so many equities. If this was five or 10 years ago, when someone asked me, Dave, like, if I want to be in the market, I used to just tell them, hey, listen, man, buy the spy and forget it, okay? I mean, because the bottom line is that, you know, over a long period of time, if you can not go, well, you're going to go through the down drop, but you get my gist, okay? Yeah. Now what has happened, though, is that you can build, you know, let's say, you could have 10 great ETFs and have an amazing portfolio that you would have had to be a professional 15 years ago to do. You know, that seems to be the reality now. What I think, and again, what I think is really exciting, if that's your point, for some investors, if it's just a long-term portfolio that you don't necessarily want to look at and you really only add to, you can probably stick with broad-based S&P 500 or Total Market ETFs at the core. But now to your point, you can complement that with funds that are focused on sustainability if that's something that matters to you, or funds focused on themes like our work from home ETF or our moonshot innovators ETFs to kind of complement that long-term holding. And then, of course, if you are a trader and you have the ability to monitor your portfolio or interest in that, you know, you can look to our leverage and inverse ETFs alongside probably what should still be the most of your core holdings in some of those more basic type strategies. But every investor can personalize their own portfolios today by using the breadth of ETFs into your point in a way that just was never available. And if it was, it would have been extremely costly to do so. And one of the benefits of ETFs is that generally there's some of the lower, the lowest cost offerings you're going to see, and they offer this great tax efficiency and the flexibility that comes with trading on an exchange. Well, then, tax efficiency is amazing compared to a mutual fund. There's no doubt about that. And we haven't even actually talked about the aspect of folks like international markets, because the bottom line is that they control a little international inside of that simultaneously. So it's really intriguing, you know, basically how this whole thing has been laying out. So the amount of money that is coming into these right now is pretty amazing. There's no doubt, right? And we're seeing that in the professionals also, right? Yeah, correct. So it's really been broad-based. So retail investors are now using ETFs more so, primarily because we saw commission rates come down across the board alongside professionals, right? So I think that really tells you about the resiliency of the vehicle itself. There's no doubt. Well, listen, it's always a pleasure. Appreciate the education. You have a great one. Safe one. We look forward to speaking in two weeks from today, Dave. Thank you. We'll talk soon. Thank you. Have a great one. Have a safe one. Stay right there, folks, who come right back.