 So, very interesting article, right, in terms of, you know, the reasons why there are likely to continue to be divergences between, you know, Europe, and the UK and the US. And so, does that mean it's going to happen again? They're just trading the probabilities of the likelihood of one thing happening over and over and no one has a crystal ball. But I thought it was a really interesting article and so we're going to come to as well, a bit of a juncture. And you can see it on the horizon. And so, how best to kind of explain this one second. Because typically what we know about interest rates is, sorry guys, I'm just looking for a colour, right. So, what we typically know about, you know, interest rates when it comes to, you know, what you should be buying versus what you should be selling, is you normally want to buy the currency that is hiking rates versus the one that basically isn't, right. That's what you want to do. And as it was saying in the article was that the US are probably likely or more likely to come to their interest rate hiking cycle, to end their interest rate hiking cycle first, right. And, you know, some of the reasons they gave was because, you know, the Fed said so, also as well. There was a case of where they started hiking first, and so they're probably likely to, you know, to end their hiking cycle first, right. But, you know, and this is, this comes after last week's where we were talking about, you know, the pivot, right, Fed pivot, to from a hawkish pivot to maybe a more dovish pivot where, you know, they were hiking 75 basis points and now they're probably starting to look to hold rates and then, you know, and then maybe the following years looking to potentially actually cut rates. But while we're here, this ended a cycle as we start to come to the end. There's going to be a period where you're going to still have the, you know, the Bank of England, or they're likely to, as it was saying, and Europe, the ECB, right, are still likely to continue hiking rates. Yeah. So, in that situation, just based off of that situation alone, talking about interest rates, you would think logically, yeah, that is a funny joke. You would think logically that the, that you would want to buy, for example, the Bank of England, or the Pound and the Euro versus the US dollar, right, that would make sense on the surface. But if they're starting to produce damages rates, and the other currencies and central banks are looking to continue to hike their rates, right, these guys are doing this, but the USD is likely to, you know, tail off, then, you know, you would say liberal Leon says, you should want to buy the one with the, that is hiking rates still, but what you need to, again, understand, and take into account is the fact that there is something called gross domestic products, right, GDP, right, and, you know, we understand about economic cycles. And so what a determining factor will be as to either the strength of the US dollar or the continued strength of the dollar, whether we're just going to see a deeper pullback, you know, before going higher, or is this going to be an actual reversal, right, to make lower lows, because I think that the dollar is going to be there is an opportunity to potentially start to look to sell the dollar, but only for a short term, as we start to actually tail off when it comes to interest rates. But I think this move to the downside on the dollar, and the headlines are going to be dovish pivot, they're ending their interest rate cycle, you know, sell the dollar, sell the dollar, sell the dollar, and I think there is going to be a deeper pullback on that but at some point, yeah, and I think the market knows this already, right, is that from a GDP perspective. So like I get to your question in a sec. Yeah. But there's going to come the GDP aspect, right. And so we've just listened to, you know, some smart money basically say that, you know, the US are likely to not go into a recession first and if they do is probably maybe some sort of shallower recession, whereas the Bank of England and the ECB are more likely to head into a deep recession. And this is where you will have narrative changes, right. This is where you'll start to have narrative changes because all of a sudden, it will go from who is best placed in a hiking cycle. Yeah, to who is, you know, going to avoid a deep recession and who is going to have a shallow recession. And that's what you're going to end up is going to end up happening, right. So as again, the dollar starts to, you know, pull back due to, you know, some sort of profit taking, and, you know, everyone falling into the trap, I guess, and I wouldn't say a trap, but falling into the narrative of, you know, dovish pivot. Yeah. And then going over the medium to long term, what is probably going to happen over the medium to long term is that the focus is then going to shift to, well, you know what, although, you know, these guys are potentially hiking rates, but they're pushing their economy into a deeper recession by aggressively hiking and they're worst placed to deal with a recession, right. And again, out of the three countries, or if you compare in the dollar to any of any countries. Again, who is going to be the dog with the least fleas when it comes to the, you know, avoiding a recession, or who is best placed to get themselves out of a recession sooner rather than later. Yeah. And I hope everybody's following that. Because everyone understanding. Yeah. So, these are, this is what I'm preparing myself for. Yeah, this is what I'm preparing myself for continued dollar strength for now. Right. Continue dollar strength for now. And that's backed up by, you know, bank analysis, etc. Yeah, but there's going to come a period. I don't know when that period is going to be it could be end of this year could be the start of next year next couple of months, you know, into into next year, right. But you're going to see pivots, the pivot talk start dovish, you know, fed their easing off interest rates. Yeah, while the Bank of England and the ECB are still hiking rates based off of persistent high inflation. Now, again, this is all based off of, you know, dollar inflation as well, right, or the US inflation because, you know, how can the Fed ease up on on on interest rates. If, you know, inflation is still, you know, problematic, but if you start to see inflation come down, right. And you start to see the Fed ease up on the on on on interest rate hikes. There is, again, I'm saying this. Yeah, making try and make as clear as possible. There will be an opportunity to short the dollar. Yeah, that's the opportunity. But there is also going to be just be mindful as you're shorting the dollar of the narrative change. And to be aware that there will be then a shift from interest rates, the interest rate narrative. Yeah, to the GDP narrative and the session talk and depression talk, etc. And then once you start to see that the dollar will be the buy again.