I would say there is a direct relationship between value and length of the lease. If one of your objectives—not the sole objective—is to maximize value, generally speaking the longer the lease term the better the value.
We're talking about nine buildings out of 360, or whatever the number is. You can take a broad portfolio approach and say, “I have these nine buildings with 25-year leases. I have a 60-40 split between owned and leased in the portfolio generally. If I look at my maturities between now and 40 years from now, I'll probably find some evenness.” So working with nine buildings won't materially skew the lease maturity schedule, and there is flexibility in the process to alter the lease term. We won't know the outcome of that until we've finished this process.