To come back to the proposition about what the Americans would do if they imposed sanctions, a lot depends on the nature of those sanctions. If it's trade restrictions, to be honest, we buy more from China than we sell, so it will hurt the consumer. A lot of what we import are consumer durables. The stuff we buy on Amazon, a lot of it comes from China. We'll see a rise in prices for certain consumer durables. Is it catastrophic? No, because, as Gordon said, the bulk of our trade is with the United States and with Mexico.
I think what we might worry about, to be honest, is sort of a repeat—Trump 2—under a Trump administration, where they impose tariffs that are directed at China, but we become collateral damage because it's a general tariff against America's trading partners. Trump has pretty much said that he's going to put a 10% tariff on all imports coming into the United States and, by the way, that includes us. If he then decides that he's going to make nice with the Chinese, as he did, and strike a deal on agriculture, that side-swipes us or has the potential to side-swipe us, because it would be a preferential arrangement with the Chinese.
If it's economic sanctions or financial sanctions, that would likely affect our investments in China, which are considerable but they're not enormous. Speaking in terms of our global footprint, the majority of our investments go south of the border, and that's certainly true of our financial institutions.