But again, unlike a bank, there will not be a cap or requirement for how much cash it has to have on hand. My understanding is that the government is intending to try to maximize as much private infrastructure funding as it can, so I can't see their, like a bank, having a capital reserve. I think it will take a little while for all $35 billion of the initial investment in money and guarantees to be invested, but to me, that's the purpose. This is going to be one heavily leveraged bank, if you want to call it that, because it won't have capital reserves on its own as part of its mandate, will it?