There are two parts to that question. First, we're financing different products than GE. We're very much involved in small town car loans and car leases across Canada that have anywhere from a three- to a five-year term.
If we were to invest $100 million into a portfolio, there would automatically be an exit strategy because that portfolio would run out over the next two to three years. This is a very short-term gap fix to allow other insurance companies to come back into the market. As Ms. Allan said, being the only one in that market is not a good thing; we want competition. And competition has to come back into the market at some point.
The minister has said he wants a short-term gap fix, and we could do this very quickly. There's an automatic exit strategy. If we said this was a 60-day program or a one-year program, at the end of it they would automatically amortize. These consumer loans are diversified across the country, so the credit risk is geographically diversified. The credit profile is extremely good, as Mr. Campbell can attest to in his portfolio.