Yes. I think it's not too early to know that being able to share beneficial ownership across jurisdictions among law enforcement agencies is critical to detecting money laundering, terrorist financing, and cracking down on tax evasion. The evidence of that is very clear within many international studies that have looked at this. Even recently a study showed that the tax gap in Canada is up to $50 billion. We know the amount of money and crime at stake is huge.
One of the things a public register does is narrow the field. It's a corruption prevention tactic. Obviously you're less likely to want to register publicly if you're a criminal, so you're closing the door to criminals. That's one of the steps.
The impacts at this point are hard to measure, simply put, because the public information in the U.K. has only been available for six months. But the knowledge that having a central registry of beneficial owners is very clear internationally. It's been identified repeatedly as one of the key elements that states must take to ensure that we're able to take effective action in those cases of tax evasion, money laundering, etc.