 Moving a little bit into the commodities section, let's look at gold. Again, we gave a quick insight around USPCE. We don't know what's going to happen with that number. But I mean, unless without any material change there, we could probably see gold remaining range bound. I'm looking between 1913, 1947, possibly. But what do you see? Are we expecting more strength or actually weakness given the fact that the dollars continuing to do well? So, I think you bring up a great point. We are absolutely first off, yes, we're absolutely kind of stuck at this. Now, this is in US dollars, but stuck at this. We'll call it 2000. $2,000 an ounce and, you know, a wider range here that we've been building over the last couple of years. And we can take this all the way back to really 2011. So we've just been consolidating around these big highs, long term highs, so I put this on log scale for everyone. Yeah, and with strength in the dollar, and we see this right if we zoom in short term, kind of starting to break down here. Obviously, we want to see this whole, but strength in the dollar will be ahead when for the for gold and precious metals, you know, silver, not a ton better. Right consolidating. It's just been up here for a few years now. Hasn't really gone anywhere. It's much further below. It's 2011 highs. So gold, you know, if silver was behind me the same as gold, we'd see silver up here around $42, $45 maybe. It's still down at 22. Very lethargic. You had in a bullish environment for precious metals, you would ideally, historically speaking, see silver outpace gold. But we would want to see more demand for the risk on assets. And we just continue to not here's silver, visual gold over the last, you know, 13 years or so, and we continue to just kind of muddle around really now desire to own either until something on the charts happens here. Yeah, got it. On that, you know, same conversation. We look at oil. Huge conversation started that one. Look at WTI Crudel more specifically hit the $91 for the first time in 2023 showed a little bit of weakness today. But I mean, you could only talk about the short term here. We don't know where it's going to happen next. Some believe it's going to go back to 100. Some believe, you know, we don't know, but a big, big conversation around what it could do to inflation. So what are we seeing first in the short term? And what do you think that could mean for the Fed, even next or even the economy? Yes, a short term, very strong. Clearly, we've got, you know, we consolidated a nice base formation here. Really, you know, over a nine month span, going back to last November, a couple of attempts to break out above 83 to four, we finally do it. And yeah, it's a pretty big move. So the next big spot here is going to be this 91 same area you mentioned 91, 92 ish again, these aren't perfect, but we've got areas of support and resistance. Yeah. And I think that this so far is a pretty healthy consolidation here. You know, we got up here. We haven't seen an immediate sell off over the last week or two. It seems that we might just want to consolidate here under, you know, 90, 91 bucks for a little bit. And, you know, then, you know, we would expect that trend to continue. That's what trends do we move higher, move lower, consolidate, and then usually resume in the direction of the overall trend. So maybe conserving little energy here. And what's fascinating is this is another instrument like gold denominated in dollars. So a stronger dollar, you would think that that would have a more of an impact on crude oil prices. Correct. It really has not. So maybe it has, maybe it is a headwind. And even with a stronger dollar, we've still got an oil at $91 a barrel. Well, if we had a weaker dollar, you know, would it already be at 100? There's no way to know that. But this is actually the strongest correlation between the dollar and crude. They're typically inversely correlated. But we've been on months of a positive correlation for really the first time in over 20 years. So if do we continue to see the dollar and crude rise together? I'm not sure. But that is the current trend. Thank you.