Well, suicidal is a big word, but it kind of gets your attention.
It's silly. Let's take the automotive industry, but it's true of manufacturing as well. We make things together; it's a seamless industry. The typical vehicle has parts that cross the border 11 times. If you buy a vehicle produced in Oshawa, it has a lot of U.S.-made parts. If you're looking at a vehicle produced in St. Louis, it has a lot of Canadian-made parts. Things go across the border all the time. We effectively have free trade in our industry.
In that sense, I think we've grown as a trading nation. I would just say pension funds, at the end of the day, benefit from free trade agreements, because most of their investments, including the ones that you're mentioning, are outside of the country. They're investing in different places.
That's one of the ties of the free trade agreement. You invest here; I get to invest over there. I have a lot of funds to invest. If you look at foreign direct investment by Canadians internationally, it is higher than direct investment in Canada. Right at the top of the list of the guys doing that are our pension plans.