Howard Widra
Analyst · Jefferies. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
So let me just sort of take a crack at it. I mean, I think, last quarter, we talked about, sort of like, the earnings capability or the or sort of really not the earnings have those sort of the early that -- the earnings momentum of Merx. And that is in, sort of, you know, the ballpark of the, you know, the low -- the low 30 millions across the whole investment, let's put aside for a second interest or, or dividends. And right now, or over the last few quarters, that that cash flow or that income has, first of all, built up as we work through leases, but it's also been used to pay down debt to get the sort of the debt facilities back in line. And so the expectation is that, most of that will be available for distribution, because, again, right? So not going be available for building up cash. You know, right now we have $190 million, of our investment is in debt. And that pays and has been paying in the in the low fours per quarter. You know, and it is expected the rest would come through dividend income there. And so that's like, that's, that's where we are right now. Could you know, something be restructured to make it, to make more of a debt and less of an equity? Possibly, if that made sense for some other reason. But as we've sort of always said, you shouldn't view it as vastly different. You know, the income coming off Merx. In terms of you know -- it was pretty predictable. Historically, this closet glitch into it, it was steady in for that debt component part, which was contractual. But we would expect it to go from 4.5 million levels per quarter, moving towards most of the net income is producing over near-term and medium-term. I can't predict exactly. It just depends on, where we want to use the capital.