 Parliament for the final vote. Do you think in the near term she has done enough to calm fears, particularly within the financial community, the business community, about their ability or the attractiveness of London as a financial hub? I'm not sure she has, James, and I think you're going to see and the CBI, Confederation of British Industry, is already talking about financial firms making contingency plans to set up outside of London, because I think it was still very much a hard Brexit. Brexit means Brexit, and we've seen those financial firms already looking at other capitals, for example Dublin looks quite attractive, probably less so than Frankfurt or Paris in terms of continental Europe as bases for some European investment banks and also US investment banks that are headquartered in London at the moment. So I'm not sure that that speech will have appeased them, they will still be making contingency plans quite rightly to move workers and their headquarters offshore so they can still benefit from the European Union. I thought interesting some of the reaction from Europe to the speech clearly she had two audiences and we spoke about this before, Europe as well as her own local constituents. Donald Tusk, European Council President, said it was a sad day but that the British Prime Minister had made a, quote, more realistic announcement on Brexit. He said the EU was now ready to start Brexit talks. How do you think the commentary is going to have been received through the halls of power in Europe? It comes as I note, interestingly, the different takes from the press. The Daily Mail, those who have lived in the UK be well associated with the leanings of the Daily Mail. A picture of her standing under the Union Jack with the headline steel of the new Iron Lady, devailed out of Germany. A picture of her embossed over a Union Jack with the title Little Britain. Look, I think, you know, obviously the Daily Mail is a fairly right-leaning newspaper and I think I thought her speech was very well balanced. She had to appease the hard Brexiters. She had to acknowledge that Britain had voted to leave and that the electorate rightly or wrongly had spoken. But equally, I think she still left that door open for very open and frank discussions with the European Union. But equally, I think the European Union and those countries within the European Union will be very sad to see Britain leave. Not only for the potential importer of European goods that it will see leave, but also it does potentially start the disintegration of the political process that's been the single market and the European Union and the single currency. Whether that's right or wrong, individual countries will see that as a potential path now for other countries to follow if it does have referendum votes like Britain has done and it could see the disintegration as we know it of the European Union and the single currency. Indeed. Mark Bailey, as always, brilliant to get your analysis. Thank you. Thanks, James. Have a good one. Staying global, the World Economic Forum, of course, underway in Davos. Xi Jinping has become the first...