I can certainly comment on it. I'll use the March 31, 2021, results to give you a better idea.
We have the reference portfolio that is set by the government, but we also have a policy portfolio that we track, and it becomes our benchmark. In there, you have a series of benchmarks, like the S&P 500 and the TSX, etc., for public markets. For private markets, we have custom-made benchmarks that we track.
To use the same 10-year approach that Mr. Glynn used in his presentation, the total fund generated over 10 years approximately 1.1% above the benchmark, for a total of almost $13 billion, so clearly, based on our own internal benchmark, we're performing slightly better than against the reference portfolio set by the government.