Well, yes and no. I mean, there are short-term events. There is a very big storm in the Caribbean coming toward Louisiana, and you have a long holiday here--Monday is closed--so the market is preparing for a potential big disruption. You have to be careful about these small movements.
I want to comment a little on the gasoline, because that's important. If you look at supply and demand in gasoline in the United States, it has really loosened, and the suspicion is that gasoline is fairly oversold now. You are producing more gasoline than you need or you're importing a lot less, and you've seen it in the gasoline prices. The gasoline prices are low in the United States. What's high is the crude portion of the price, not the gasoline portion. Refiners are not doing well. They're not losing money, but they're not really making money. They have very low margins, so we have to be careful when talking about gasoline prices. Yes, the price that consumers are paying is high because the crude portion of it is high, not because the gasoline portion of it is high.