Thank you, Mr. Dhaliwal.
One of the things I alluded to in my remarks was robust data and research. I think Canada has done a pretty good job globally of branding Canada as a friendly place, a nice place, a good place to live, a place with good raw materials, including talent. What we need to do to accelerate the flow and the pace of investment coming into our country is build a database, and also research where global capital flows are trending. In other words, instead of the “spray and pray” approach of “come one, come all”, we need to find out where major global capital flows are pursuing opportunities. Is it in artificial intelligence? Is it in bioproteins? Is it in advanced manufacturing? Let's find out where the dollar is going, and then assess where Canada has clear global strengths and leadership in those sectors. That way we can avoid a lot of false leads and a lot of noise, and can really cut to the chase in matching investment interests with real opportunities that exist in Canada. I think that will be one of litmus tests of the success of the organization: if we're able to do that through a deeper, richer, robust data and research platform.