 Good morning, everybody. I'm Tommy O'Brien, coming to you live from TfNN headquarters in St. Petersburg, Florida. It's Tuesday. Is it Tuesday? Is it Wednesday? I'm lost here. It is Wednesday this week, flying by Wednesday. I thought so. 10 a.m. Eastern time, 30 minutes in the trading day, and we have a relatively calm market to start things off, indices slightly in the red. Dow Jones negative by 7 points, trading at $25,650. S&Ps currently negative by 4, trading at $2814. Nasdaq negative by 15 points, trading at $76.75. We'll start things off with the VIX this morning. VIX holding steady, basically $14.84. Quite an acceleration from $17.85 on Monday's action. Jumping over to some of the futures markets. We'll start it off with the Dow, so we've had some volatility in both directions. A little bit of a sell-off from the highs that we had around 930. The Dow up there at $25,777, already 100 points off that level, trading $25,658. Nasdaq 100, pretty similar story. Going back, you can see the Dow actually was higher than it had been overnight. You get the Nasdaq climbing back up to that level, and then from 7403 right at the open, we're now down almost 40 Nasdaq 100 points. S&P didn't quite reach where it was overnight. 2831 overnight, we reached 2830 at 930 this morning, and from there we're off about 12 S&P points. Crude oil with volatility in both directions as well. We saw it trade higher. Yesterday in the early morning, $60.32 the high. Early this morning, we reached a low of $59.45, and from there we're back just above $60, and the price of May crude. We'll get the EIA inventories a half hour from right now. Gold with volatility as well. We're holding steady at around $13.18, and then gold just in the last 20 minutes. Check out that five minute bar as you see gold spiking from $13.16 down to $1309.68. In terms of what else you have happening out there, we have the U.S. effort to cut the trade deficit showing the biggest win in almost a year. So you have the trade deficit falling much more than expected, excuse me, in January to $51.15 billion from a forecast $57 billion, the decline of 14.6% represented the sharpest drop since March of last year and comes amid continued negotiations with China. Stay tuned. Come back at 10 o'clock with Tom. We'll of course have those oil numbers at 10.30. Then we have Fast Market by TD Ameritrade. Kevin Hanks, the team at 11. Basil Chapman, Steve Rhodes, Dave White, Tom O'Brien all this afternoon. Have a great Wednesday everybody.