That's been a feature of the economy since 2008. We've seen this huge quantitative easing. This huge stimulus in monetary policy seems to have disproportionately gone into financial assets—the bond market, the stock market. Now we're seeing, in the commodity market, that commodity prices are blowing through the roof. Even oil is up substantially. Crazy stuff like cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin are up, so there seems to be a lot of gambling going on in asset markets.
We're not seeing a lot of this, but a little more than in 2008-09 we're seeing this spillover into areas like retail sales. However, mostly it's gone into financial markets. That's created....
I should mention too that, much more so in Canada than the U.S., it's gone into our housing market. Exactly why I don't know. Obviously our housing market has been more.... The housing market in the U.S. had a tremendous crash in 2008. That's made people nervous down there. A lot of people think we have the conditions for a bubble here. Why exactly that money goes into housing, I don't know.