The thing about the lumber industry in North America is that it's a North American market. Despite the fact that we have these tariffs and everything else—or as a result of the tariffs—it really is a North American market, so our prices fluctuate accordingly. We saw that through COVID. When there was so much demand, both north and south of the border, lumber prices went way up.
When we look to the future, the biggest danger here would actually be a Canadian lumber industry that suffers so much that we see a shrinking of the Canadian lumber industry, and then when things pick up, we don't have the capacity in our own lumber industry to supply Canada properly and the opportunities south of the border.
That's why it's so critical that we help our lumber industry survive. We expect that we're going to come out of our current state and we expect to start building more houses. If the mills have shut down and aren't capable of reopening, that's a huge issue for Canadian housing, for Canadian homebuilding and for Canadian house prices looking ahead.