Sure. As you know, Bryan, we do, we have built up a significant amount of cash and given where we have been over the past 12-months. And we felt like it has been important to make some substantive changes to the balance sheet, our liquidity profile. The issue we have is that it is, frankly, it is a little bit of an unknown still, I mean even looking at these variants that have been coming and the delaying of certain people to getting back to the office, it does add a little bit of choppiness to this recovery. And to your point is, the vast majority of our loans, as Deric mentioned, as I mentioned, are in cash traps. And for most of them, generally speaking, the way to get out of them is they need typically six or two consecutive quarters above and it vary by loan, but generally speaking around, call it 1.2 times coverage. And we just don’t know what that date is. I don’t know if it is in six months from now, because things really recover or if it is 12-months to 24-months, which I think is frankly, a more likely number as we sit here today. And so as we look at the fact that we may not be able to extract cash out of our portfolio from for another 12-months or 24 months. We have got to be very thoughtful around well how then do we run our CapEx program as it begins to ramp up in the next 24 months. We have over the next couple of years, we have $2.5 billion of debt that doesn’t necessarily have hard maturities, but has extension tests that include debt yield tests. And it is hard to know whether or not the exposure to those extensions test and the pay downs needed to meet them is $0 or $750 million. And we just don’t know given the variability what is going on. Now, as we have mentioned in other, in previous calls, we were very focused on trying to get these loan modifications to reduce those scheduled extension tests. And we have been successful on a handful of our bigger ones, but we still have some big ones left that we are focused on trying to modify. And then when you kind of add on well, we have got obviously this rescue financing that we did that were needed to pay back the next few years. We have got to be able to get our preferred back current at some point in order to get our S-3 eligibility back. When you start adding up those dollars, and just the uncertainty of exactly what the recovery looks like, we feel like it is important to err on the side of being conservative so that we are avoiding being back in a position like we were a year ago.