What's happening, and we're starting to see this emerging already in the capital markets, is that as valuations have been taken down 20% or 25%, the assets start looking pretty cheap. There's a lot of capital out there, particularly from the private equity side of the market—foreign private equity. What they will do is come in and set up a corporation with a debt structure that allows them to create an interest tax shield. In other words, they get to deduct the interest costs attached to the debt financing they use to buy the income trust. In that way, they accomplish the process of acquiring the assets, acquiring control of the entity, without paying any corporate tax.
That's what's starting to occur. We're starting to see it take place. This is what happens when you see a fiscal regime suddenly jolt into the capital markets and cause a valuation shock. That's what we're seeing over the last six months.