I don't have the most current numbers, but I will say that it tends to move up and down with your insurance options and what it looks like your coverage will be. It's designed to allow you to take a look at a future price scenario. It essentially buys some insurance against that.
What's attractive about this is that it's a premium-based program. If you're buying more insurance, it will cost more money, but it increases your level of coverage. It also allows you to still have the topside in the market. In your contract in cattle, for instance, you've already fixed that price in there.
With the increased value of cattle and all the different challenges we face—weather challenges, and you can see the challenges we are experiencing in Europe and the impact that has on markets, and the volatility that we're dealing with—it adds another tool that producers can use to look into that period of time when they're going to be marketing those cattle. They can establish essentially what their break-even will be using this, and do it at a reasonably affordable level of coverage. Sometimes they'll take a look at what's available and decide they don't think that coverage is suitable, and you'll see the participation decline. Other times you'll see it increase.
Recently we saw some of the prices decline, and a number of people actually were able to get some coverage as a result of that program.