I could comment on that, given that our organization meets face to face with many of these applicants. We don't deal solely with third parties. We leverage off our network around the world, and my team and I meet with some of these clients. So we get to be very close to these needs and understand them.
For sure, once investors arrive they may have ancillary needs in terms of setting up a business, and we will guide them. What you're referring to maybe touches more what I call the active categories, the categories under which you have an active need to either enter the labour force and work, maybe as a condition of your visa, or to set up a business. That's the entrepreneur category. We come across many of those clients, and they have skill sets and they have experience and expertise in their home country, and they ask us about Mississauga or Calgary or Vancouver. So we try to make those linkages with the local bankers and accountants and lawyers, government representatives locally there as well, to try to make those connections. But I'd be lying if I said it was easy. I'd be lying because Canada is not Hong Kong, it's not Shanghai, and it's not Dubai. So there are adjustments there, but HSBC is sensitive to those kinds of situations because we're in all these markets and we try to brand ourselves as the group that can facilitate this, and we do, to some degree. But at some point obviously more could be done, I think, in terms of helping make that transition.
For investors it's more ad hoc because they don't need to do it. They do it on their own. They have their own networks. But for entrepreneurs in particular this is a very big need, and we're trying to help more and more.