We certainly do look there from time to time, and it varies, of course, by region.
There's this notion that there's a Canadian housing market when in reality there is no Canadian national housing market. Each region is very unique and specific.
In the major centres, Toronto and Vancouver, they compare very similarly to the major centres in the U.S. for the same reasons. Interest rates are where they are, but house prices are very high in all of these major cities, whether New York, San Francisco or otherwise. Once you get outside of those, I think there is definitely a general acceptance that affordability is still a little bit better in the U.S. given that they have a lot more supply. They have a lot more availability of housing stock, whereas with Canadians we tend to be more concentrated around the major centres and therefore we do suffer from this systemic undersupply issue.