It doesn't mean that the measures will be in there, but if he wants to include a measure in the budget, he might ask questions about that specific measure to some stakeholders as well. I think that's the point we're trying to get across here.
Quickly, especially for those who are involved in the Toronto and Vancouver markets, I guess it's too early right now to say what the consequences are in quantitative terms. Do you agree with this? Is it too early to say we have an impression? It might be efficient or it might not be efficient, but we can't really say at this point and we'll have to wait a bit.
Do we also all agree that those were two markets that were overheated? We don't even know if they constitute a bubble or not.
We've seen provincial measures in Vancouver—including a special tax for foreign buyers—that seem to have deflated the market, hopefully to a point where it might be seen as healthy. We'll see about that. In Toronto, I would say it's somewhat stabilized right now, but it hasn't decreased per se. Do you have a feeling that the provincial measures will actually be more efficient than the federal measures that were announced recently to try to address that situation? I'm just talking about those two markets, regardless of what happens in the rest of the country, because we all agree that the rest of the country is actually made up of different markets that will be impacted differently.