Jonathan Peng Zhao
Management
[Foreign Language] [Interpreted] Thank you for your question. I would like to answer the second question first. So, in the past five to six years, among all those online recruitment players, for a new customer who began to sign new contracts with any platform, there is always someone to help him to convert into a custom stack. There is a process from [indiscernible]. Our role is to help, to let a lot of new users who have never used or paid online recruitment services into this new area. The majority of our annual contract customers, I believe, is from -- it is converted from our own unique customers. A small portion of that, we are sharing with our competitors. As of this year, for the second quarter, our offline annual contract customers, majority are from the conversion of our online paid customers. However, according to our observation, there is evidence that the trend -- the customers from other online recruitment platforms converting to our customers, the trend is increasing. From an operational perspective, it's not simply switching from A to B, but dividing their budget into more cooperating partners. And back to your first question, the fixed external commission that's required for the white-collar recruitment demand recovery, I believe it has. This time which will have effect on the recovery of white-collar recruitment on the key mechanism. The first mechanism is that the industry that recover first will expand to other industries to help those industries to recover. For example, culture, sports, entertainment, media, new energy, automobile, aftermarket, all these industries, which are showing encouraging recruitment trends, will impact other industry which can affected by the recovery strategy. And the second mechanism is that as the time goes by, there are more concrete evidence which prove that the market is recovering in order to enhance people's confidence to increase their recruitment activity. For example, at beginning -- in the first quarter of this year, the large company, this recovery is [relatively worse] (ph) compared to SME, which I assume another company, they might be affected by confidence and the forecast. However, since the second quarter, we have witnessed that the enterprises with more than 10,000 employees and the medium-sized enterprises between 500 to 1,000 employees will recover much faster. And for your question about the supply and demand, whether there is a structural imbalance, we may have saw that -- for industries like real estate and Internet, we do saw the decline in recruitment demand, but I don't think it has been strong enough to concrete structural imbalance. That's my answer for your question.