Yes. I mean, I think commentary is right. Generally speaking, we do have quite a bit of seasonality, a bit more than maybe typically would be expected, coming especially a little bit from the ordering cycles we see in Europe, but also generally the snow business or snow-related business that we have. And as we said, in 2026, this is going to be quite a bit more pronounced. So we will see, of course, a slower start in Q1 because these walk-in-van orders, while we do have the backlog now, and we still see the good momentum, it will materialize only beginning in Q2 really. And we still have some one-off expenses associated with that ramp-up in the first quarter. So we don't have the revenue yet, but also some costs already flowing in. And that also from a segment view, will hit us, of course, in the U.S. So you will see that if you compare Q1 U.S. or North America as the segment officially is called versus last year. In Europe, you will see quite a good improvement Q1 over Q1. But of course, keeping in mind that Europe has had a slow start in 2025. So yes, you see that basically coming in out of the order backlog that wasn't there in Q4 that now leads to that lack of revenue basically in Q1 walk-in-vans, and again, commercial truck body, we commented on that. It is a soft market. We still see that, and that will persist through Q1 or does persist through Q1. We can say that as of today. And of course, the geopolitical environment also didn't really help in the last couple of weeks. So you feel that as well. And then you have basically in Q2, Q3 of the ramp-up, as we explained, and the fourth quarter really will be, I would say, similar to what you have seen now in the dynamics in 2025, but again, more pronounced that this is really the strong quarter that will bring the year together. I just wanted to be precise on that to rightsize expectations on our quarterly momentum of 2026.