It will be brief, just two short things trading on Paul's comments.
First, we do anticipate some easing in the growth of even the Asian economies because we don't think they will be able to completely decouple from the United States. The United States is just too important a trading partner, plus we see some easing as well in Japan and Europe. So all of this is factored in. The bottom line is that we still see fairly steady and strong growth in many of these countries, which will provide some support for commodity prices. From that, of course, it provides support for the Canadian economy, but we have such a close trading relationship with the U.S. economy that we would be even less decoupled than the Asian economies. It's a factor. It provides support. But I don't think you're going to see decoupling in Asia or especially in Canada.