 Our September is historically the worst month of the year for the stock market, but Eric Wiegand from US Bank were two weeks into the month and stocks are at record highs. What's going on? You know, I think investors have elected to focus on the glasses being half full, that half full prospect. The less bad scenario. The less bad scenario. And the less bad certainly is, you know, the impact of two catastrophic hurricanes being less bad than feared. And the heightening expectations that we were going to see another missile launch over the weekend not being realized. So I think that's given some comfort, some ease to investors and they've subsequently elected to focus on what we continue to see as a synchronized global economic recovery in continued strong earnings. Now obviously a lot could happen over the next two weeks. What do you think? I mean, do equities end up bucking the trend this month and pulling out some nice gains? Certainly, you know, from a technical standpoint, the bias is, you know, for the markets to continue to move sideways to firm. You know, our expectation would be that we would not be surprised to see some volatility creep in. In the remaining two weeks of September? In the remaining two weeks of September. Really, until we get into mid-October and get back to earning season. Is earning season the key to the market this year? I mean, obviously double digit growth and earnings have pushed stocks to record highs, but obviously we have the Janet Yellen put in the market. I mean, how do you analyze this? You know, we do think that earnings are critical for the markets to sustain their current levels or advance from here. A lot of expectations are that the markets will continue to demonstrate earnings growth. If that is the case, that will be supportive. We're generally not seeing a significant rise in inflation or inflation expectations. There's no inflation. We're not seeing evidence or the likelihood of an increase in recession. So in that low growth environment, earnings do hold the key. Now we're at 2487 in the S&P 500, a record high, right? Where do we go by the end of the year? Because we still have Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin on CNBC saying that tax reform is coming by the end of the year, which we know would be such a stimulus for the markets and for corporate America. So what's your year-end target? Our year-end target is a range between 2,500 and 2,600. We're pointing to 2,550 as being our year-end target. And that's really emphasized by continued earnings growth. In which sectors? And we still expect to see Fed activity before year-end. So that's a little bit of a different view from consensus. And which sectors do you see? From a sector standpoint, we continue to like those sectors that are able to demonstrate growth. And so we, from a style standpoint, we still have a bias there. But also those companies that are able to grow faster than their peers. Is that tech? It certainly would be tech. You're seeing select areas within consumer discretionary. Sure. We're still a little bit concerned about things like financials in here, which would certainly be a beneficiary if we were to see that tax. Yeah, I mean, you look at a 10-year yield of 2.1%, that's nothing for the banks, but Eric, we'll leave it right there for right now. Thanks very much for joining us. Thank you.