First of all, it's in a blind trust. The public office holder has absolutely no idea what the trustee will do with it, and he cannot give him direction, so the trustees, most of them, will just hold it. They can trade. That's their privilege, obviously, and they will do that, but they also have to account later on to the person who placed the things in trust. The best course is to basically just be a passive holder, and that's what most of the trustees do, but they don't have to be restricted to that.
Second, the public office holder obviously knows what he placed in the trust, and if he makes decisions that could be germane to what's in the trust, in those cases, we establish what's called a screen. In effect, we make sure that a decision-maker does not make decisions regarding this very valuable asset that he has in the portfolio, which will be directly affected by his decision, and it is an asset that is specific; it's not covered by general legislation or covered by a class.