Predicting the economy these days is a really hard thing. We know there's going to be a global fibre shortage. Of that we're very certain. We think there will be a price peak for lumber, followed by a drop, and for us, one of the key things is not to overreact on either side.
One of the things the Chinese are most worried about with us is that we're there holding interminable dinners with them and selling them stuff because the Americans aren't buying it, but we'll abandon them as soon as prices and demands go up. So it would be very important for the Canadian industry—and I'd say for the government—not to lose sight of the importance of diversifying our customer structure, and to stay in China, even though the prices go up.
I saw the report. I didn't read it in detail. Due to the pent-up demand sitting there, as soon as you take all the surplus capacity off the marketplace, all of a sudden people haven't been producing; they've been responding to the surplus that's there. But the global economy has not been the most predictable of phenomena, so who knows?