Thank you for the question.
To build on my colleague's point, when you're looking at the numbers exactly.... By their very nature, they're secretive, so they're difficult to find.
You want to look at impact. I think that might also wind up being something that gets.... If there's any last holdout province that doesn't want to join this registry and, all of a sudden, we see a certain province's limited partnerships starting to skyrocket as other provinces go down, there's pressure to be put on that particular holdout jurisdiction: Why do you want to be Canada's remaining secrecy jurisdiction?
This follows what we saw with the U.K. registry, where Scottish limited partnerships dropped by 80%. This is one way to mine the data once the registry comes online: Look for movement shifts, because, of course, the crooks are going to go where the weakest link is. This is why it has to be a harmonized approach. It's not just a federal approach.