Again, I'm giving you examples in the real estate housing space mainly because that's the area of experience that we have as a firm. There's something called the life lease. I mentioned it in my notes. For those who haven't heard of the model, a life lease is a mechanism that someone who is in supportive housing needs, say an elderly individual who has some form of disability or requires not everyday care but requires care from time to time, a nurse to come to their unit. The life lease creates the ability for that person to actually purchase a leasehold on a piece of property.
Instead of that individual moving into a long-term care facility and essentially paying $3,000 to $5,000 a month just to rent, what they can actually do is purchase the unit that they're moving into. Often these are going to be, say, townhouses or condominium units next door to a long-term care facility or near a hospital.
What you have the ability to do is to create for the person who's in need the opportunity to own an underlying asset.