Yes, yes. So the kind of bellwether businesses, a lot of them for us are in FMT. There's much more fragmented user base through indirect distribution. So you can think of places like Gast, Warren Rupp, Viking. Over on the HST side, a business like BAND-IT, which does clamps, there's a portion of that business that's pretty fragmented as well through kind of industrial applications. There's a few others, but that's generally the nature of what we're looking at. And the reason it's meaningful for us is, I mean, it's really, really rapid fulfillment, as you mentioned. So we can get an order on a Monday, make it on a Wednesday and it's in service on a Friday. So it gives you a really good indication of what consumption actually looks like on the outside. And when those are constant, it generally tells us the system is working, people are fixing things, maintaining, replacing, like-for-like. When it starts to move, they're doing more work. They're running extra shifts. They might even be expanding the facilities. So that's kind of how we use it as a filter. And sorry, the government funding question. Really, that's doesn't have the effect you might think. The North American fire and rescue markets are actually really good. They've been good for a while now. As you know, we do -- we've got kind of an enhanced automation offering there as well that's kind of helping us grow above baseline entitlements. So what we're really seeing when we reference government support, it's more of a European and Far East issue for us, that's China markets and some broader Southeast Asia. Typically, at kind of this point back half of the year, they start to move up a bit as you get closer to the end of a budget cycle. And this particular year in both geographies, we didn't see that. In fact, thought it kind of turn the other way. If you think about it, in Europe, a lot of the funding over there is being used for other purposes, you can think of like the European equivalent for FEMA and sort of preparedness, so there's not as much to go around in our line of work. And I just think in China, it's the continuation of a theme there. It's a desire to support more local industries, if you will, and be really, really careful on decision-making around higher government spend at a time where the economy is just not as strong, but not as affected on the U.S. side, it's not that direct a relationship.