 I want to ask you, do you think SNAP could be the next Colt stock? Well, yeah, I think it fits, but the difference between a Colt stock and this is that ultimately a Colt stock is never valued on earnings, it's just valued on pizazz, until it gets to the point where it is such a winner that you can't fight it, and that's what happened to Amazon. Amazon was Colt until it stopped being Colt. Tesla, we see the Tesla numbers, we see a billion dollars in sales in China, that's impressive. We see all these credits that they get that are pushing credits, those could go away, but Tesla's producing a lot of cars like Amazon produced a lot of sales, and those are stocks that are hard to value. Now, a lot of, I happen to like Amazon for ages because I like the product, I just got the Echo, it's really just fantastic product, thank you to my in-laws, but I want to emphasize that SNAP is a Colt if only because of the way that the deal gets placed. We don't have a lot of high growth stocks, this is a company where the stocks being parceled very strictly, if you get half your position, typical position on at the $17 level, you're certainly willing to go and buy half at $34, and that's how you get a good average. Now, at $34, you're paying a price of sales of $35, which is not anything that you're going to want to do if you have historical, let's say, parameters of any sort of substance, but that's what happens, that's why I've been saying, a silly sight, a silly valuation, but this is what goes on, it's Wall Street, and it's just what occurs, and I've tried to emphasize this over and over again as I've been around and I've been on syndicate desks and I've been a guy who has tried to get a lot of syndicate stock, and these are the, it's not tricks, it's just the mechanics of Wall Street can't handle the demand at times, and this is one of them.