 So, PDAC 2024, Matthew Stevens, you've decided to move into Rare Earths. You have had a successful career. Why would you do this? Excellent. Excellent luck, really. I've always been a geologist. I'm a geologist for my background, but I've been in gold-based metals, and I was looking for a potential zinc play. This is back in my days with a company called Urban Gold. I'm from Ottawa, and I was looking around. I knew the Ottawa area, and I knew an old zinc mine in the area, and I was looking for other potential projects there, deposits come in clusters, especially in the base metal sector. Anyway, so I was looking through these old reports in the government database, and usually the – this is Quebec I've been talking about – and the Quebec government database is one of the best in the world, I think, except they make mistakes, they make errors or they miss things, right? So I found this old prospector report, which is probably the worst one I ever read. There's more descriptions in there about what they take for a breakfast each morning than the actual rocks that they looked at, but at the back of the report there's an assay sheet and no zinc, but I saw something called neodymium, dysprosium, and I said, what the heck is neodymium? And I've never worked in rare earths before that, and then I did some research. So what did these values – they seem pretty high, so what did these values mean, and are they good, and sure enough they were good? So we staked it. This is back in 2019, so sat on it, 2021 came around, and then I started looking at it again, and rare earths picked up quite a bit since then, and well, this is actually pretty interesting, so we created a company around this one project. That's how the creation was done, and we were private for about two years. So for everybody out there going neoterics, if you take a look at the market performance since they went public, give us more of an introduction to the company. You're in Quebec, for instance, critical minerals, magnet materials, and you've got numerous projects. Absolutely. Well, rare earths really captured me. I mean, like I said, with gold and base metals and gold, I don't really understand why there's value behind it, and that's a different story, but neodymium, I understood the technology behind it, where it's going to – what the end project is going to be, and I come from a family where – call it a green family. My brother literally works for Greenpeace, and I've always been the bad mining guy in the family, the black sheep, if you will. And then I started looking at this new denium and what it's used for, the green energy. It's a strategic mineral in a different sense, but the green energy really interested me. And I saw – I mean, I don't want to talk bad about other countries, but I saw how things were mined in other countries and not in an environmental way, and also the strategic aspect of it, Canada barely having any of the projects in no production or at the time there was no production. And I said, you know, this could be really interesting, and I can't say I've been ever excited about any mineral as much as neodymium, and the other rare earths as well, but neodymium, I mean, that's what we are, that's what – Well, he keeps saying neodymium, and of course that's one of our favorite topics here at Investor News. What are you planning? You've had a very good start. Excellent milestones. We were very impressed with your company because you've got one of our CMI directors on your board, Alistair Neal. What are you planning this year? So we're going to do our maiden drill program. We were supposed to start already. We got unusual warm weather right now. We're in the southern part of Quebec, so there's barely any snow left, and we're going to end up with a sort of a muddy situation. So we don't want to destroy all the trails. There's really good access there, but we don't want to destroy all the trails and roads that lead up to the project. So we're just going to wait a few weeks, and hopefully the weather stays warm, and it dries up in there. And so we're planning right now mid to end of March, and hopefully – it's a small program. This is our maiden drill program. It's – we're doing about 2,000 meters. We're going to go in there right on the main showing, which we call King. We had extremely good values at surface, and we just want to make sure those values repeat themselves at depth, basically, and how long, deep the system goes. Like I said, the very initial program, we're just going to touch the surface, and then that successful will follow up with a larger drill program that sort of ends up – end of summer, basically. Well, I've taken some time to look at your powerpoint, and you have some very good capital market players on your team. Will you be doing any M&A's? Are you thinking about that at all? You're a very good, prominent geologist, and a well-known member of our community. Are you planning on considering that? Or are you just going to stay focused on what you've picked up so far? Well, we're fully cashed up, so I'm not planning any financings. The only financing that we're considering would be strategic partners. Rare is a – even though it's very attractive – it's a complicated market, especially downstream, processing a lot more steps than, say, gold, for example. And very few strategic partners, at least right now in the market, compared to other sectors. So if a person or a group comes into North America, which is starting to happen right now, like we're a line of corporations, which is probably the biggest rare producer outside of China, is stepping into the U.S. now with a plant in Texas. So we imagine they're going to want some feed for this processing plant. And with very few deposits, only one in production right now in North America, and we hope to approach people like this. And that will be sort of the way of the M&A, basically. Your goals for PDAC. What would you say is your number one goal at PDAC this year? It's – there's – call it different phases. Personal – personally, today, we're Sunday here, there's a lot of talks on rare carbonatites, which we've never seen really at the PDAC. There's been a few in the past, but there's a whole full day to day dedicated on rare. So we'll be – I'll be at all these talks. Fortunately, some of them in different rooms at the same time, so I'll be running around quite a bit. But so that's the first step. Going around to different booths, meeting with different companies, which are very few in the rare sector to see what their projects are, what they're – how to get to the steps they are at. Like I said, we haven't even drilled the property yet, so there's a lot of steps we need to do. And also, we're doing some promotion. We were private for a long time, so we really need for promotion, but now we're public since January. It's time to do promotion and tell the story we have. And so that people not only understand what we have, but also the rare sector, which has always been sort of a nebulous sector for most of the retail market anyways. Well, thank you so much for joining us today. And for everybody interested in finding out more information on Neoterex, please go to their website. Thank you. Great. Thanks, Tracy.