Certainly. When we're in a phase of the business cycle when risks are higher, such as now, companies are much more likely to make use of EDC's insurance services. Exporting sounds like a very easy thing of getting a sale and getting the money, but in fact there's a lag between making the sale and getting the money, and that lag can be 60 days, 90 days, 120 days, this sort of thing.
So while that's happening, the company is actually at risk of not getting paid. It's almost like lending money to the foreign company that has done the buying. And in an environment like this where the entire world is in recession, the possibility that your buyer will go bankrupt and not pay you, or just simply not pay you, is much higher than normal. So in that environment, companies are much more likely to use EDC's services to insure those receivables. We've seen this in every other business cycle also. So if you like, EDC's penetration into exports goes up during phases like this.
In addition, there is a lot of international activity that companies are doing now, which is investing in foreign economies, to build global supply chains or to get a presence in a foreign market. We call this integrative trade, and that aspect of their actions, which we help to finance, is separate and not counted in exports, although it creates exports and imports--actually, trade in both directions--down the road.
So our business activity has gone up across the board for more than one reason.