It's interesting, the way you worded that question. I'm not sure in a sense, the market's pricing of different positions. And I don't mean just the mortgage REIT space. I could say, the broader equity markets, is sort of in a different category today than it's been in a long time, and long time probably since the late 1990s. And so what I would say is, we have confidence in the markets over time. And from a management perspective, it's our responsibility to make those trade-offs in terms of leverage, in terms of risk management, and to evaluate those, and do what we think is best for our investors over the long run and not obsess necessarily about how that's going to be received in the very short run. I mean, like to your question, I'll just say, like it would have been – it's very easy. Given our net spread and dollar income, given the category it will be in, all right? It would be very simple and it would be well received to raise the dividend here. It's – I mean, and yeah, we think the stock would like that in the short run, but we think that we should be prudent about where interest rates are, where yields are on other vehicles forgetting just the mortgage REIT space. We're not obsessed with where a couple of our peers are or stuff like that. We think that it's – this is why people trust management over time is to make those kind of trade-offs and to understand that sometimes they won't necessarily be well received for a quarter or two. But over the long run and we talked about our long-term track record, you generate those – that kind of track record by making good prudent risk management decisions over time, and we value stability and we think investors do. So, now I'll come back to – look, we'll – our leverage decisions, our hedging decisions will be made with preserving and enhancing the long-term net present value of the company. And we know that over time that will be received – will be rewarded by shareholders, and it will reward shareholders. But especially in today's market, but even in other markets, you try not to – you can't help but think about it, but you try not to obsess about the short-term reaction in the stock market.