I don't know the answer to that. I would look to the nature of the eleven bids you received, and try to understand how many of those were for all of the properties, whether some were just for one and whether there were multiple bids on one property, just to know the degree to which you might have had the kind of competition you allege there was.
Where eleven people are bidding on a piece of property, it's not clear it is necessarily a competitive setting. Keep in mind—particularly if you have a government who's trying to establish a track record, with a phase one and a following phase two—you may well have people saying let's take a look at it and see what's there and we'll throw in a bid, and if we get lucky, fine, but if we don't, then so be it. So I don't know how many serious bidders were in that group. Obviously there was at least one.
You could take your view, though, that this is what we could get. Then the question becomes what was the due diligence on the part of government to establish its reserve price? I guess my approach in what we were doing was to say, well, what should they be expecting from a government's perspective to get out of this deal? And that's where we came up short.