We saw a huge impact four years ago in the business. I think the impact, particularly on the buyer side this year, was more muted. Canadian buyers just seemed to carry on buying. What we did see, though, was that our sellers had to scramble, particularly the small sellers. Their cost of doing business really increased significantly over the summer.
It wasn't that they had to have these alternative solutions in their back pockets; they actually had to be using them because—and there were a couple of points there—at any moment there could have been a strike or a lockout. They would have had to have already shifted their business to these alternatives, which were very expensive and costly to manage. That's what we saw and heard from our sellers, particularly over the duration of the entire summer, that managing these alternatives was very expensive.