Thank you for that.
Mr. Sylvain Charlebois, I'm going to ask you a similar question about Bill C-56. The example that I have given is a recent report where the Federal Court judge has upheld in a way the new powers that Parliament has given the Competition Bureau.
We know, or at least the Competition Bureau suspects, that there are anti-competitive practices within those property controls that are embedded and that, in some cases, Loblaw and other companies have substantive stakes in the REITs that control the plazas and shopping centres.
Essentially there are covenants and requirements within there. There may be ways that they are blocking—or it's embedded in those contracts that they are blocking—competitors from operating within those same plazas.
Can you speak to the fact that the Competition Bureau now has this new power? Do you see this as a positive sign that an investigation can go deeper into what's really going on in those collaborations that may be anti-competitive?