The losses at the Caisse de dépôt are, of course, from ABCP, but are basically losses on the stock market. The stock markets have declined. Just as there was some exuberance earlier, fears are currently being reflected in the markets. The point is that over time, some recovery in the stock market will be expected. So it's not clear that those losses per se are necessarily putting pensions at risk, because the pensions have a long horizon to recover some of the losses.
Now, what the Bank of Canada doesn't do is to provide capital. If there is any need for capital, it would have to come from government. As I said, in Canada we don't see the need for capital; but the Bank of Canada would not, in any case, be providing capital. The Bank of Canada is providing financing, it's providing liquidity, providing loans, in a sense.
If you were to look at our new facility, for example, which we just announced last week, we will be taking a number of securities—corporate bonds, for example, or commercial paper, and some bank-sponsored ABCP—and we will be providing liquidity against those, basically to meet the liquidity needs of institutions, which could be pension funds—