 Hey Mazda, how you doing? I'm doing pretty well, good to be back. Yes, and it's great to have you back and you know, we have a two-way market here. I mean, there's Nasdaq today, Dave, whoa, baby. If you haven't seen the Nasdaq today for the market in Gemma, but the Nasdaq folks was down over 500 points. It's only down 150 right now, only 150. But the bottom line is that we have a two-way market, which is a beautiful thing actually. So, you know. You're right. Yeah, yeah, look at these markets, Dave. I mean, you know, we will have a different conversation here for maybe four or five weeks. You know, I mean, when we look back in the last two or three years, even longer than that, I mean, realistically, there's always been that trend up, up, up. And now, you know, we've got a little bumpy ride here. Yeah, look, you could, you know, if you spend enough time on Twitter, you can find a stat to prove anything of that this has been, you know, the best three years in the market, best 10 years would have you, the valuation at all time highs. But what we do know is that ever since the global financial crisis, we've been in a low interest rate, no interest rate, and in some cases, negative interest rate environment. And that means that the pricing of different types of stocks, so stocks with high multiples, high expected revenue, set aside earnings growth, was extremely bid up. And now we're seeing markets begin to maybe adjust to what's an environment look like where we're not just printing money as aggressively. And in fact, we've moved from this so-called QE, quantitative easing to QT, quantitative tightening, plus interest rate hikes. And it's spooking the markets, you know, for good reason. But I think the selling has been really sharp, particularly opening this year, and maybe that's because people actually took that long week, that week off between, you know, your Christmas holiday and your New Year's holiday. And it's a bit of catch up here, especially as the moves in the 10 year have been really aggressive. Yeah, there's no doubt. And you know, folks, I remember when the last time rates went up, I believe it was six quarters at a time. Greenspan went up six times in a row. And, you know, the market gets interesting. The market gets used to it, I mean, but guess what? That's the first time that I knew that, you know, when they say take away the punch ball, they really take away the punch ball, man. And of course he overshot at that point, but you can see market-wise, you know, it's really good. You know what the difference now, which is really cool? When that was, folks, we didn't have as much product like direction shares to actually go both ways. You know, of course we could go shot the cues, but people have a much better, a much bigger, basically menu of how they can protect themselves if they want to protect their portfolio, are in fact, if they want to go on a bearish position when they're thinking it's going to go down. You know, so it's pretty cool that we have many more products now that you can actually protect yourself or make money when the market is basically soft. Yeah, it's funny you bring that up. We were talking with our traders and a few other folks on our Monday call this morning, and it wasn't that long ago, and you know this well, really the gold miners, you know, your nuggets, your dust, your JNUGs, your JNUG, they were really what I'll call the hero products in our lineup. That's where the most trading volume was. The assets were, activity was happening on a two-way basis. Last couple of years, the trading has moved toward TechL, which is the broad-based S&P 500 Tech bull fund that we have, also SoxL, you know, I'm just in the semiside, and a few others like WebL, that we, WebL and WebS that we launched recently just focused on those kind of internet names. But now again, we're seeing a fund like FAS, which is a bull financial fund. FAS is the bear. Come back really strong in the last couple of weeks from a volume perspective. Also, I encourage folks to look at a ticker DPST that it would stand for deposit. Just region, that's regional banks on the bull side. So there's a breadth of products that traders can look at, particularly if we're saying if we believe we're in an environment where growth stocks may be a bit softier, or even if they come morning back, we're gonna be, it's gonna be a big battle here as the market digests the pace and path of these rate hikes. Because we know it's coming. Powell's very concerned about making a mistake communication-wise, like they did in the fourth quarter of 2018 and saw the market tank 20% before bouncing back, that that doesn't happen. But the market's moving here. So traders need to stay on their toes. Yes, and I'm elated you brought up these two ETFs because what you have, and the ETFs I'm talking about folks is the DPST, okay, which is basically the regional banks and of course the FAS, which is the large banks, because the reality is that, okay, it's a large turn in the market. Everyone's tells rates are going up. And if you believe that folks, the bottom line is that banks are gonna make more money. And you know what's so wild about that, Dave, is that the banks don't even have to trade like an investment bank, I need a deal. They already have the money. So if the spread gets bigger, guess what? They're gonna make more money. I mean, that's how it shakes out in the banks. Yeah, no, you're absolutely right. So the setup here for financials, from a trading perspective, going into earning season, which is kicking off this Friday, which is crazy to think about. Yes. And really with a bunch of the mega-cap banks and others next week, this, we gotta be on our toes and then there's gonna be a lot of opportunities for action, heading into Friday and then into next week for the financials. There's no doubt. Well, listen, thanks so much for the education. Really appreciate it. Look forward to speaking in two weeks from today, Dave. Talk soon. Thank you. Have a great one. Have a safe one. Stay right there, folks. We'll come right back. Dow's down 338, Nasdaq's up 159, S&P's up 41.