Thank you, Mr. McTeague.
On the first question, not just on stainless but the whole product mix and who makes what, of course, as with a lot of industries, there has been a combination of consolidation and specialization that has developed across the industry. As I pointed out in my remarks, we do compete within North America, and in fact I would contend that we probably have, in some respects, the most open steel market in the world. Certainly we face import competition from other countries, as well as from the U.S.; and equally in the United States, we need to compete with very big companies. None of our steel companies are in the top 50 globally in terms of size, so there's a specialization factor that certainly comes into play there.
Your second question related to the ownership changes in the industry. It continues to be, in some respects, an incomplete novel, frankly. There has indeed been major ownership change in the Canadian steel industry, and it's not just ownership. We did, of course, have the CCAA proceedings with respect to Stelco, and Algoma before that. The Dofasco situation now sits in kind of an interesting legal situation within the Arcelor framework, broadly defined, but not part of a Mittal-Arcelor combination. So there is no question that we have companies that are under both new ownership and to some extent new management, and we continue to see that develop.
Your final question was with respect to the income trust issue. Frankly, I'm not aware of any particular impact I'd identify today. I certainly haven't had any opportunity to discuss it with any of our members.