I don't think we are adequately on top of this because of essentially the nature of the Chinese state investment. Other countries that are doing studies comparable to our own, such as the U.K., the U.S., India and Australia, all mention China in their mandates.
I think that when we look at Chinese investment, we have to be aware that typically the investment is often for strategic purposes rather than for profit necessarily. Of course they want to make money, but often they don't, and you can look at the CNOOC-Nexen deal as an example. In fact, when you look at the thresholds for investment, often the Chinese state firms use multiple firms with multiple investments to get under the wire of our thresholds, but they actually violate what I would regard as the intention of our act.
We don't have any process that I'm aware of that looks at people who are planning to come to Canada for investment purposes. In the—