 Christopher, right now a lot of people are bracing their portfolios, holding them close to their chest or selling everything and running into all kinds of interesting options. You're saying critical minerals is a safe space to be. Is that correct? Absolutely. So, with that, where should we go? Where do we start? Where does a new investor who's new to critical minerals go? Do they start with 10 rare earths? What would you suggest? All of you both. We've had a very traumatic year with the war in Ukraine. Rising energy costs, rising inflation, rising interest rates have pushed down the markets. But I feel a turn is here. It's already here. The war has definitely not gone away. And neither has inflation nor has the interest rates. But the sheer bargain basement nature of the mining markets at the moment is proving too much of temptation for people. But very interesting, this turn in fortune seems to coincide almost exactly with the downfall of crypto. Crypto has definitely imploded upon itself. And people have long feared that crypto would steal gold's aura, steal gold shine. And it has definitely over the last two years. It doesn't necessarily mean there's going to be enormous rallying gold. But it definitely makes the speculative money that has been pursuing the chimera of crypto take a very big second thought. Now, a lot of the money in crypto has been lost. It's been vaporized. So it's less a case of money moving out of crypto into mining. It's that new money is not going to be heading into crypto. It's going to be looking for another home. Crypto is not an option because it's just such a crazy and Ponzi scheme, really. So I'm going to put you on the spot. Let's play a quick little game together. I'm going to mention a critical mineral. And then can you throw a company out that you like? And explain why. So let's start with neodymium. Well, I would say neopreformance materials. It produces it. It takes it from various parties and turns it into a product that it can now churn out to the end users. Many of which, of course, are the EV industry. I know you follow 10. What kind of company do you like today? Alphabet, Alphabet knocks the ball out of the palm with a 4% grade. Enormous positioning there in the DRC. Fantastic. It's also got 4% of the global production. It's the largest producer outside of Malaysia and Indonesia. And it has low production costs than they do. I mean, it's just a fantastic company. It's a billion dollar market cap earlier this year, which has been sliced because of the tin price retreat. Now, tin has churned. Tin has churned in total V formation and is heading up fantastically. All right. How about you pick your next one? Cobalt, hafnium. Which one's Scandia? Which one of the three, for instance, are most important to you today? The most real part in the Scandia space is Rio Tinto. But if we came back to what was the first one you mentioned? Cobalt. Cobalt. Yes. Jerbo is global. The Australian listed stock that acquired the ICO Cobalt project in Idaho and has now bolted on various refineries in Finland and in Brazil. Has made itself like the master Cobalt outside China. And what we need really is a non-Chinese source of Cobalt. And they've hoovered up all the intermediate production processing, I should say. And with Idaho Cobalt coming along, you know, there'll be a producer as well. So it's really the best company in the Cobalt space. Well, before we let you go, what about antimony? Well, my first love is antimony, as you well know. And you know, there are no producers of this metal besides Mandalay outside China. Mandalay resources on TSX. But Mandalay is primarily a gold company and antimony is just a sideline. But antimony price has been, after lithium, the best and most enduring price rise in recent times. Well, so many things have retreated during 2022. So, yeah, antimony is justifying my faith in it. Well, one more question. Which, what critical mineral has surprised you the most recently for movement or change in price? Ting's price fall from $55,000 down to $17,000 in the year was quite obviously a Chinese effort to mess with the minds of not only the producers, the other users around the world. But it was done in such a ham-fisted way. It was so obvious that they were burning up reserves of tin to get the price down. That when they finally ran out of reserves to dump on the market, the thing has rebounded and rebounded dramatically. They've been rises of 7% sometimes these days. This is not a small market. This is 340,000 tons per annum and a 7% move in a day is phenomenal. And it just goes to show that the Chinese just sort of like once again, shot themselves in both feet and in the head at the same time. And now the prices were bounding and then sold off their reserves. Is that dumb or what? I'll tell you what, we'd love to see you again, Christopher, sooner than later to talk about this crazed nickel market. Can you leave us with any notes on what's going on? Everyone's sending me notes with, I've got nickel, I've got nickel. Yeah, well, look, I'm not an enormous fan of nickel. I've got to say it's good. It's a great base metal, but it's definitely not a metal that the dial is going to be moved massively by EVs, because it has so many other uses that even the EVs are going to be just a small proportion of say 20, 30 demand for nickel. That is really a metal that's driven by the stainless steel market, which is enormous. And, you know, there's no shortage in it. Sorry to say it. Nickel is well known where it is out there and processing later on nickel has its problem. No, I don't see it as a supply disaster waiting to happen. Thank you so much again, Christopher, for your time. And for those of you interested in finding out more about what Christopher has to say or accessing his research reports, please go to Halgart and Company's website. Thank you, Christopher. Thank you very much.