So, yesterday the Fed met, right? And they decided, let's just hold and pause on interest rates. We don't. Why do they do that? I mean, I thought that the Fed was so smart and they could control and manipulate the economy. This Iran situation is like the thing that they can't figure out, right? The longer that this goes on, the more inflationary pressures that there are. And therefore, they're going to have to raise interest rates, right? But if it ends tomorrow, right, what are they still going to have to do? Probably raise interest rates. Like we talked about last week, this bottleneck, this logjam of supply chain disruptions because this has been shut down for so long. It's not going to stop, even if this conflict ends tomorrow. It's going to go on for probably three quarters of a year as supply chain gets reestablished. Now, it might have an immediate impact on oil because perception is reality, right? But supply wise, the world isn't getting stuff. They're not getting fertilizer. They're not going to get oil anytime soon. Natural gas, things coming through the straight. There is a huge bottleneck, which is why the Fed decided we're not going to make a decision on lowering or raising interest rates right now because we don't know what's going to happen, right?