I could give you an example by doing some reverse engineering.
What factors could cause the corporation to have capital difficulties? For example, if the 2007 recession in the United States had lasted five years instead of two and there had been a subsequent recovery, and if house prices in the United States had fallen by 60% instead of 30%, what would have happened?
There must be stress tests, whether it is this one or another. The purpose is to see which factors could endanger the corporation's capital. These situations are hypothetical and may never happen—which is what we hope—but if in 20 years' time we were to move towards such a situation, the corporation would have simulated scenarios to know how to react and which direction to take for two, three or four years. It would have time to react because it would have defined the long-term impacts from these scenarios.
These are the kinds of things you have to analyze. In the scenarios, can we extend the crisis periods and see what problems would occur? If such scenarios became a reality, they would have already been analyzed. You have to go as far as using scenarios that are striking.