 Well, it was a tough session for the market. And I think there were several narratives, including really resolve, right? Because buyers once again, emerged to at least selectively buy the dip today. The biggest winners in the market were consumer staples. And it's really interesting there because let's face it, they have zero pricing power, but at current valuations, you know, they've become something of a store value. Money also floated into real estate and utility names as investors were looking for a combination of safety and yield. Now, the biggest losers were a direct reflection of geopolitical and geoeconomic risk, mostly mainly China. Okay, and by the way, we are starting to see some cracks in their economy. They had a big earnings miss from one of the world's largest tech companies, the largest in Asia. Also early in the week, a bond default by government backed company. As a result of the China news, US stocks that were the biggest losers while we saw technology, the biggest losing big index because of technology. And even on the Dow Jones industrial average, it was the Chinese proxies, Caterpillar and Boeing, that the biggest percentage declines. All was another big story today. That massive inventory bill really belies the sort of notion that conventional wisdom that was developing that the man was running ahead of supply. Crude oil broke a really key support point and it really hurt a whole lot of trades out there because there was a lot of bets that a crude could go to 80 at some point this year. So on that note, we saw Chevron and Exxon, they were the biggest percentage losers on the Dow after Chinese plays. Outside of equities, commodities in general look awful. Copper had another terrible session, another sign that the Chinese economy might be in some serious trouble here. And gold was awful and it makes you wonder because that's your doomsday scenario. So maybe we're not there yet. The question is, how do we navigate this uncertainty? Melissa Armos with this stock swoosh of stock swoosh. All right, Melissa, first of all, the session, you can make a couple of things out, right? We were down, there's a lot of things I look at. From technical analysis, and I even think we found buyers from Dow that done the 25,000 because that's what people wanted to buy, but also the intraday resolve in the market. I think there's been a stealth rally, there has been a stealth rally since March and April. It doesn't get a lot of publicity and I'm glad it doesn't. But what do you make of it now as we move toward the second half of the year and to the second half of the year? I think the worst is over. So if we were gonna break, if we were gonna fall, if we were gonna collapse from all of this tower of business that's going on, I believe that we would have already done it. It doesn't mean we're never gonna have a sell-off day. Again, we gapped down this morning, we failed this morning, but we recovered. We recovered into the closed. Cisco is up tonight, big time, which means the market potentially probably could gap up tomorrow morning and rally. We are back up near not making new highs down in the SMP, but near it, and the Dow never really got over that 26,000, it's in the DEA, it's 2260, it's 26,000 in the Dow. We never got over that area, but we're getting close. We're getting so, so close that I think the worst is over. And with all the tower of business going on all summer, you know, Trump meeting with North Korea, all these things happening in Turkey, it's one issue after the other. The market has pretty much decided it's shrugging it off. But it doesn't struggle off when the technology sector goes down. It's hard to get a broad-based rally when techs aren't participating. Is that a red flag for you? Do you worry about that at all? Well, I mean, today everything's sold off. So typically when the market falls, everything falls. So you had Apple fall today, you had Amazon fall today. That's my point. Is there ever gonna be a session when Amazon, Apple, Facebook can be down, but the rest of the market's up? No, I don't think so. So tech has to be part of any sort of leadership here? When you look at those charts, technically, remember, I look at the technicals. When you look at those charts, those charts are moving ahead of the market. If you wanna go long stocks, and this is good for all the viewers, if you wanna buy a stock right now, what you wanna buy, where you wanna see strength is something moving faster than the market, ahead of the market. Apple's moving ahead of the market. It made new highs in the last two weeks when it had earnings. Amazon made a new high the other day before it fell yesterday. You wanna buy stocks that are moving ahead of the market, and that's a good sign. I don't think the market can continue into 2019, 2020 without some of these stocks leading the way now. Facebook is a pickle. That's a different story because there's been a lot of things happening with that, but I think Apple looks great. Apple is great. Bottom line is big tech. You think will it lead and has to lead the way? All right, Melissa, let's leave it there. Thanks a lot.