Mr. Sprott, you pointed out that these are paper deliveries, and I'm just wondering again, are we talking about physical inventory? When you're actually buying a crude future, are you not buying with a deliberate date on which you have to lift or take that delivery within 23 days?
I'm concerned about seeing guys from the banks and the pension funds—the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan—driving around with barrels of crude in the back of their BMWs. And this is the sort of parity we have. But the reality is that for many, this is a serious market. It deals with supply, it deals with product, and yes, it's done with a paper transaction, but sooner or later someone is going to have to buy that product down the road.
And if Mr. Masters and Mr. Diwan are correct, as long as you have a larger presence of people from the financial industry looking for a way to hedge their bets and to make up where they've lost in places like sub-prime, are you not going to wind up with an eternal self-fulfilling prophesy of higher prices that will continue to undermine the economy and deny other industries the ability to invest in new technology?