In one minute, I will not do your question justice, so we will happily offer to follow up, perhaps before we leave Ottawa this week.
There are a number of different aspects that we can look at on financialization, including, for example, short-term rentals, which is a different form of financialization and was, in fact, addressed in the fall economic statement.
The path forward in the short term, for me, is to look at opportunity so we can level the playing field for non-profit actors with those who might be making investments in real estate right now.
I do have some hesitation to look at measures that will upset the ability of people who are in the housing market to remain in the housing market, but there's more to talk about on that piece.
In the meantime, I sense that there's widespread agreement within the sector to create opportunities supported by the federal government to broaden the ability of non-profits to snap up those spaces. The increasing trend that I'm watching among investors is that they're not necessarily taking advantage of that opportunity that you described the same way today as they were even just a few years ago, when interest rates during the pandemic were at basement levels.
I think it creates an opportunity for us to deal with non-profits, which are not motivated by making money but are motivated by protecting that stock in the market. The mechanism through which we look at that is something I'm considering now.