Yes. The 65,000 barrels a day, Will, when we set that target 2 to 3 years ago, it was a bit of an arbitrary target. The goal there was to create a company with enough mass, Will, where you basically had a company that had enough bulk really to really attract enough investor attention. It wasn't really scale to be able to lower unit cost, because we've - at our current scale, as I mentioned earlier, on the call, we're already one of the lowest unit cost people in the Permian, and we've got a slide in our presentation that kind of shows it already. It's really just to have a significant scale to go forward. And that number could have easily been 60,000 barrels a day, it could have easily been 70,000 barrels a day, when we picked it 2 to 3 years ago. 65,000 was a number, frankly, that I selected based on what I thought could be reasonably developed based on the acreage we had. And we've just adhered to that number, and so - and we continue to adhere to that number. And it's - we hit our target every year as to get to that number. But it's a very high CAGR for an oil growth rate, and we certainly have said that we can't extend that high CAGR growth rate through, say, 2025. No company could achieve that kind of oil growth rate for - extending it kind of forever. So we've always said that when we go post 2020, we will inflect and kind of change spots a little bit as a company, and we'll be likely initiate a dividend and go to a high, but less high than current, growth rate for the period of '21 through '25. But we haven't specified what that is. But it won't be the asymptotic production growth rate that we're currently on. So, hopefully, that gives you a little bit of explanation. And we do expect to - sometime during 2020 to reach cash flow neutrality if one believes WTI is $75 that year. And then we'll become a bit of a different company at that point in time.