 Okay folks, Larry Pesavento with the mid-afternoon update for TFNN. I wanted to bring this to your attention that we are actually up in the green on some of these things after being sharply lower last night. We had a very bad day, well not a bad day, a down day yesterday, S&P down about 70, Dow Jones down about 600, and NASDAQ down about 250. People have asked me why I don't speak more of the Dow Jones industrial futures or the Dow Jones industrial. The main reason folks, it's the fourth most important of the four stock indices, number one S&P, number two NASDAQ, number two Russell, number three NASDAQ, and number four is the Dow Jones. And the reason for the Dow Jones, it's less open interest for one thing, but it's basically a price weighted index, in other words it's the price of the stock in the Dow Jones that makes it work. You look at Goldman Sachs, United Health Care, and Travelers, and a few of these other that are in there, and Apple, and you're talking about 10 stocks out of 30 running the whole thing. It's bad enough with the NASDAQ, you got the NASDAQ 100, and that's only about 20 stocks. So by far the S&P, second is the Russell, and third of course is the NASDAQ and fourth would be the Dow Jones. That's the main reason for that, nothing personal about it at all. When they first started to do these stock indices back in 1982, I was on the floor, and the S&P was the only one they would get. The Standard and Poor's family would allow them to use their name and that, but the Dow Jones family was so against commodities, it didn't have anything to do with it. It wasn't until they became very popular at the board of trade with the NASDAQ, and then also with the CME, which was the first one, which was August 16th in 1982, then it became very, very popular, and now their household words just about everything. So that's what we're seeing here today, a lot of activity, get ready folks, I don't believe that we're looking for a crash, someone asked that, I don't see any sign of that. It may happen, but I've been surprised before, but I don't see any reason for it now, we're just having normal markets that are correcting, listening to what the Fed is saying. Remember folks, tomorrow the Fed is speaking, so there's going to be a lot of things going. Next day we have the GDP number coming out, so all that is going to be making the markets jump around. Nothing about any things with the war or any of this other stuff. I don't see anything like that in the air, in these charts. They look a little bearish right now, but they certainly don't look anything near looking at death's door at all, that's no question about it. We'll be right back, 877-927-6648.