Well, bigger than that is that there are costs on both sides, whether there are any costs on the bureau and costs on business. You can understand that issuing formal powers, going to a court to secure a subpoena power, forces companies to spend a lot of time to respond to those requests and to also ensure that they're complying with a legal order from a court, and if they don't comply with that order, they do open themselves up to criminal sanctions. So given the seriousness of that, they hire a legal counsel and they spend a lot of time going through documents. So that definitely is a cost for business.
There's also a reputational cost. You're putting an industry under investigation without specific allegations of wrongdoing, and on the bureau, it would run the risk of distracting us from our core enforcement activities and the mandate that was given to us by Parliament in terms of diverting resources from our key enforcement matters into these broader market sector studies.