Okay, I’ll tell you what you won’t get from me here, Jason, because I’ve got enormous respect here for the volatility in this environment. I think we have the potential for spread volatility. Longer-term though, I think, in longer-term, let’s make some assumptions, longer-term, let’s believe in America, believe that the economy will get better and believe that we’ll have some higher interest rates, sometime in the future, I can’t predict when that will happen, I think these hybrid ARMs will be fine. I think they will be in good shape, I think a lot of people will want them and I don’t think there will be that many of more around. So I can’t predict. I won’t go about predicting that specific spread level, just because – and it’s not the word volatility, the market is so uncertain to factors that we’re dealing with and so I hope that helps. Let me – I’m not trying to be evasive, I’m just trying to respect the market environment, spreads are rolling quite a bit, if you set here and you had volatility continues to come down, let’s say you confirmed Janet Yellen, let’s say that you don’t start tapering until March of next year, spreads across risk assets are going to be supported, because volatility will continue to come down.
Jason M. Stewart – Compass Point Research & Trading LLC: Okay, that’s fair. And let me just switch topics, then I’ll jump back in the queue. In the CMBS market, do you think that the FHFA’s mandatory reduction in GSE volumes was a contributing factor to why spreads widened in the second quarter? And then if I could relate that to your thoughts on how you think, the upcoming scorecard might have an impact if at all on the CMBS market?