 Peter, after a remarkable price surge, Bitcoin is falling back below the 11,000s right now, so was it too early to call it the next bull run? Oh no, I don't think so. Just because we're correcting, Bitcoin has a record of correcting. If you look back to the price history of Bitcoin, I think there's been four or five times when Bitcoins have an 80% correction from high. We've barely come off 20% here, so yeah, we're still in a bull market. We just got ahead of ourselves. Now, everybody's freaking out that the market's somehow topped out, and perhaps it has topped out for the time being, but I still see Bitcoin as very possibly in another parabolic bull market, just because we've had a one or two-day correction. That really doesn't mean anything. You can go back in the Bitcoin's history and find out all kinds of 30% to 50% corrections within a bull trend, so I think this thing won't work itself out. We could correct back to perhaps 9,000. 9,000 is the level that I've had in mind as a level where I want to be a buyer somewhere over 9,000, so I think between 8,700 and 9,500 would be a reasonable correction that we could see, and that would, I believe, be a buying opportunity. You also said a few days ago that Bitcoin is experiencing its fifth parabolic phase since 2010, and that's what makes Bitcoin a market like no other. What did you mean exactly by that? Well, I mean, you can go back into the history of tradeable markets where we have various assets that can be traded, whether they be equities or commodities or interest rates or cryptos, where we've had Bitcoin from the 2010 low advancing to the 2017 high by more than 8,000 fold. There is no other market like that. There is no other market where you can see parabolic advances, a series of parabolic advances on a long chart. It's hard to find a stock such as Apple or Netflix or Amazon that's had a parabolic advance on the log chart. You can find parabolic advances on arithmetic charts. You cannot find them on log charts, but yet on Bitcoin, we've had a series of parabolic phases on the log scale that have taken place, and we've seen since the 2010 low Bitcoin advance more than 8,000 fold. There's no other market like that. You can't find another market like that in modern times. As a matter of fact, I tried to find a market that was similar that had that kind of a similar advance. The only market I could find was German interest rates during the 1920s. Bitcoin is really quite an unprecedented market. One can maybe point to the altcoins, but hey, the altcoins wouldn't exist if it wasn't for Bitcoin. That's the reality. Bitcoin is crypto, and crypto is Bitcoin. Coming to altcoins, I saw that you recently claimed on your Twitter handle that people that are expecting altcoins to follow the Bitcoin in the next bull run might be delusional. Why do you think so? Well, I think there's just a lot of scam out there. There's a lot of shammy altcoins. Perhaps there are some altcoins that will have traction, but Bitcoin is the gold standard. Most of these altcoins, look, they're out there because some fast buck artists wanted to make some money in the crypto space. They don't have really any meaningful purpose to exist. There are a few of them that are niche coins, but they're niche coins. Mainly these altcoins serve the purpose of market speculation and raising money for people who did the ICOs. I fully anticipate that 99% of the altcoins will end up being worthless. But of course, everybody who has their pet altcoin claimed that their pet altcoin will not be one of the 99%, but the reality is 99% or more covers an awful lot of altcoins. If you had to give a piece of advice to young crypto traders in this moment of particular uncertainty, I would say due to high volatility, what could that advice be? If you're buying more, then you can handle if the market corrects 50%, you're buying too much. If you really believe in the long-term narrative of Bitcoin, which I think the millennial generation by and large believes in the long-term narrative of Bitcoin. The proper position is to own some, but to own some that you'd be willing to ride to zero. If you can't ride what you own to zero, then you own too much. Own something and then take advantage of significant price breaks like we've had to add to that ownership position. Don't be buying on these huge $2,000 up days. That's the wrong time to be forcing yourself into buying a position. Buy it when it's the right time to buy it and then don't buy it otherwise. Don't get caught up into the emotion of advances. Buy it when it's smart to buy it. When it was smart to buy it was back when Bitcoin was at least under $4,500 if not under $4,000. To be buying Bitcoin at $13,000 and trying to make a wise decision at $13,000 to me just doesn't make sense.