 you know, I think the euro potentially is going to potentially increase, you know, to the 107s. I did see something today which was on that. Where was it now? It was just the Euro Frank parrots. You know, it wasn't Euro Frank parrots. You want to talk about it was the dollar. Where is it? Where's that? Where was it? Oh, here it was. No, no, no. Sorry, guys, one second. And I had it as well. It was this is a Euro dollar. This is it. Sorry, Euro dollar peak dollar behind us as PMB parrots. So the dollar is very richly valued Euro at record under valuations. And so ECB Fed divergence to boost Euro dollar and this is a concept that I think again needs to be repeated, which is that the Europe at the moment are, and this is their headline as well, the guard joins ECB officials in signaling July as rate lift off. So they are now committed to trying to lower inflation and probably thinking about the economy second. What I mean by that is that inflation is a bigger problem than a recession. So the European Central Bank are pretty much now going to hike rates. Now, there is again a small caveat to this is keep in mind that we are buying the rumor. We're always buying the rumor and trying to stay ahead of the curve. The European GDP have just has just come out for the first quarter. And so it's it's bad, but it's not after it doesn't paint the full picture of the effect of the Russia Ukraine conflict, right, and that and what it's had on the European, the European economy, right? So they're taking the first quarter readings based off of pre war. Yeah, the second quarter readings. Yeah, basically from January, February, March. No, no, sorry. So first quarter reasons will be from will be from March, March, April, May, or April, May, June, April, May, June, right. That will start to then encompass the effects of the Ukraine war on the economy. So I think they have a little bit of a breathing room, a little bit of breathing room when it comes to convincing the market that they're going to hike because the data for the European economy, as far as the GDP doesn't come out until for another maybe two months. Does everyone follow me, by the way? Is everyone following what I'm saying? Yeah. So with that being said, because the data, you know, is is lagging a bit and they're leading with their interest rate hikes, you could see and this is an excuse as well for, for example, for liquidity, from a liquidity perspective, because, you know, there are obviously massive traders in the market. Yeah, there are big traders in the market that will, you know, do have stop losses way bigger than, you know, we as retail traders. And what you could start to see is prices pulled back to that 107, which actually isn't that high, right? 107 is around here and 110 is somewhere around here. So that's just a, that's just a, you know, a decent pullback, if you know what I mean, to these levels. So you could see something like this start to happen. And the reason why that is is because rather than there being a divergent, you know, policy, right? Whereas, you know, the euro and the dollar were diverging in policy policy for ages, right, for well over a year, you're starting to see that. Yeah. As a, you know, because the Fed were hiking rates or looking to hike rates and Europe were behind the curve. Now what you're seeing is, is if this is Europe, you know, this is Europe and this is the dollar, you know, where the dollar were strengthening or appreciating their currency in the euro were looking to, you know, continue to or not be, you know, appreciating their currency. The euro now is very weak, very weak and very devalued, which means it's pushing inflation higher, which is causing them to be a lot more hawkish. Yeah. So now that they're starting to announce rate hikes, the divergence in the gap between the two is coming closer, right, before it used to be very, very wide and now it's coming closer. And now, now that they start to converge, right, the valuation of the of the euro dollar has to, it has to be revalued that exchange rate has to be revalued, because this move to the downside was always was based off of a divergent trade. Now that we're getting a, you know, revaluation potentially of the euro, the euro can't possibly be, you know, worth 106s. Does that make sense, everyone?