Yes. So again, I'll just kind reverse it. It has rebound at least that it's, again, without being too specific for April, that we're just wrapping up and getting into May as we close the books, is more in the flat versus down, I think, David mentioned 20% in the last quarter. These are rough numbers, I think. It depends on what type of steel and so forth. But steel prices went, for example, hot rolled directionally around $1,800 a ton to less than a $1,000 all here in the last couple months and bounce back up $1,200, to $1,300. I haven't tracked in the last week or so. And our buyers are efficient. They need to buy, these are a lot of must-stock products, but if you are on the industrial side, for example, with a solar farm or something else, and you can hold off a month or two, it obviously, they get the forecast who make economic sense. And then on the Electrical side, it's more of a must-stock product, for example, with metal conduit. But again, a distributor that probably was trying to buy ahead just to make sure they could keep stock in this precarious supply environment, I’ll say hey, let's hold off for two weeks, just one week of inventory in a 13-week quarter is 7%, 8%. So you see where all of a sudden, hey, let's cut a little bit, it's enough to swing that number in metals between our Safety & Infrastructure business and Electrical is a large portion of our business. So, but as David mentioned in the prepared remarks, I think this deal costs from what our forecasts say, it kind of moderating at this level. And as we go into kind of spring by and stuff like that we're starting to see the demand pick back up. And the last statement I think David once had, again, the other parts of the market were just amazing. I mean, we were up 12% as David mentioned. So I think well above what they are, anybody would say is typical market at this point.