Again, I think it falls down to a funding issue in which you designate significant medals. The purchase and acquisition of the Shankland set of medals is a prime example. The museum eventually did not obtain the medals.
When you start to do this type of thing, you start into a bidding process and a bidding war. Once you do that, you are going to raise the price of medals exponentially. And as Mr. Allard has mentioned, if there is no funding line to do this, how do you expect these organizations to go out and actually compete in that market? Because competitors will drive those prices up.