Thank you very much.
I think that's an extremely fair and pertinent question, that we should be assessed on our results, and I'll highlight two key areas. We have a dual mandate, for detection and for deterrence.
On the detection side, it's really about our core product, which is a case disclosure, an intelligence product. So you look there at the volume, the value of the transactions. You also look at the feedback we get from our partners, from law enforcement and from CSIS. Do they consider it a high-quality product, a timely product that contributes to their investigation and ultimately leads to results for Canadians—being charges, convictions, and reduced money laundering and terrorist financing in Canada and the associated criminality? So that's a key front for us.
The second is deterrence. Do we have a system in Canada of financial intermediaries that are aware of their obligations, respect their obligations, and provide high-quality reports to us? We receive over 15 million reports a year from reporting entities. These are a key part of our analytical work, and these create a deterrence regime that makes it difficult to use Canada for these purposes, for money laundering and terrorist financing.
So those are two key areas where we're very cognizant of generating concrete results, having them measured and having them contribute directly to the well-being of Canadians.