First of all, we refer often to this notion of strains. The strains in the marketplace that we refer to are the actual functioning of the market. That pertains to the actual liquidity of the market: Can you sell a bond readily when you want the cash, or do you find there is quite a spread between bid and offer prices? It's a sure sign that a market is being disrupted when bid offer spreads widen out. It makes it very hard, for example, for mutual funds that are running bond funds to rebalance their portfolios, or for any investor who chooses to have cash instead of their bond to sell that, or for the borrower, for that matter, such as the government, to raise cash in the market when the market is not functioning as well as it should.
When there are increased liquidity demands, the most liquid assets that we have are Government of Canada securities. They are the places people turn in order to raise cash, so the market tends to get these strains.
I wasn't referring, then, to any issues at all about raising government money. What we did say yesterday was that the cash needs we see emerging in the near term are very likely to produce additional strains in the market. This is just a digestion effect. I don't see this as a credit issue.