There are two aspects to the question. One is about the enforcement track of what the bureau does, and then there's what we do on a competition promotion track. What we do in market studies is under our competition promotion mandate. That looks at how competition is working in industries as a whole, and the goal there is to make recommendations to government about how we can try to improve competition. If the question is about whether there may be anti-competitive conduct happening on the part of businesses, that falls more under our enforcement mandate. As my colleague said, that always turns on the facts of the situation.
In terms of allegations about collusion, it really boils down to whether there are agreements among the companies that are leading to those outcomes, not necessarily that there is the same price. It always depends on the facts.