 Right now we're at about 2441 in the S&P 500 but you say a critical level to watch is 2450. The most recent high which is 2450-51 I think is the actual intraday high would be a range that you want to see because look we're well up and beyond any trend line right so now you have to kind of extrapolate it out. 2450 seems to be the level where we've hit resistance the last couple of times we've tested it. My sense is that we'd probably hit it again especially this week and the next week as the volume starts to slow. There's not going to be enough drive or unless you get some major catalyst. There's not going to be enough drive I think to get it up and through so I would expect the market to churn. Actually I wouldn't be surprised if it churned and churned a little bit lower after it tested to 2450 level. And what about oil? I mean we're still in bear market territory markets don't seem to care. We are well into bear market territory in terms of oil right down 27% off the high. Yet there's a little pop in the oil price today which everyone's crediting to the move in the market. Both in Europe as those markets are all higher and the US futures here up 7 points. I think it's a little bit overdone. I think you have to look at oil in a very different light now. Look the world has changed. Technology has changed the way oil is produced. Brought the cost of producing down and so 50, 60, 70 dollars a barrel of oil I think is something we're not going to see for a while. I actually we're below all supports in oil so I wouldn't be surprised to see oil test you know the high 30s. Maybe 36, 38 somewhere in there before it finds some real stability. This minor pop today okay it's all great makes everyone feel good but it doesn't it's not significant enough to really mean anything. But if oil goes down to 36, 38 do the markets you know decline like they did last year when that happened? Well listen that the interesting fact because the markets are not declining at all. Look what oil's done down 27% year to date yet the market is at all time high. So there's almost a disconnect now between what the market sees for itself and how it you know how it factors oil into that picture. Now if oil really breaks down sure then I would expect you're going to start to see the market back off because it is going to affect you know earnings for the second quarter and earnings for the projections for the third quarter. And so therefore all those numbers will have to come down and then the market will have to reprice. That doesn't necessarily mean the market's going to crash just means that the market's going to reprice.