Mr. Boshcoff, something came up when we were at the ARA conference in Las Vegas--that's the retail association in the United States. I'm not extremely familiar with this, but I'm going to throw out this concept and see if it's a potential that may help.
It's called fertilizer swaps. I guess it's the equivalent of what futures trading is in grain to fertilizers. It appears it's an art down there, more than a science. It's something that perhaps, if we were able to master it, might help flatten the future cost of fertilizers so that people can lock in pricing and at least be more stable in terms of forecasting their incomes and projections.
I don't know a lot about it. Our association is endeavouring to find out more information about fertilizer swaps and how it could help retailers, at least, buy more predictably. I understand there's a major problem with market liquidity. But maybe it's a tool that we could look to, and if we mastered it, perhaps it could help.