Franklin N. Saxon
Management
Okay. Anderson is our -- for the rest of the folks on the call, is our U.S. operation. By way of background, we kept -- we closed 15 to 16 plants last decade, but we kept one. It's in Anderson, South Carolina, and it makes woven velvet and textures. Small plant, less than 50 employees, but we make woven velvet, which nobody in the world makes except us. So it's a category that we'd really like to hang on to. Last fiscal year, they had their best year in probably 8 years. This year, the demand is off somewhat, the first half of this year, and so we're not making the money we made last year. But remember, the U.S. operation is 9% of our total sales in upholstery, so it's a small operation, but we think, strategically important for the long term. What we really focused on over the last, really, 6 months is bringing our strategy of innovative products to Anderson. We focused on the innovation mostly out of China first, and we really hadn't turned our attention necessarily to the Anderson product category, which we have now done. So we are encouraged with some new introductions that we're seeing down there and out of our -- out of that location for the next 6 months to a year. And there also appears to be some uptick in demand for those products as well. So I think we've weathered a little downturn the first 6 months of this year, but we see it turning up over the next 6 months and in the next fiscal year. Anderson, we were patient for many years. Many folks said, "You need to close it. You don't need it. You weren't making any money," but we stayed with it. We were patient, we trimmed the costs, and we've got a very low overhead operation there. We've got a great group of people. And all we need is some few good innovative products that take hold, and we're going to be exceptionally pleased with their performance out of our Anderson location.
Budd Bugatch - Raymond James & Associates, Inc., Research Division: Okay, all right. Last question for me is kind of just a housekeeping question. We adjust earnings and you adjust earnings from a more normalized tax rate. I think it was 10.4%, is that 15%?