Yeah. We are performing pretty much according to plan, and that's reflected in the guidance. I think there's a reason we don't give quarterly guidance, because we're still not a really big player and that you can have some of this quarterly variance. But overall, we feel really good and that's reflected in the updated guidance. So on the second one, look, I think you have to start with the business model first. I think it's very underappreciated that we are actually building medical groups, which are very dense in the geographies we operate in, which are payer agnostic for the entire patient population, entire specialty network that we are creating across the practice. I think it's pretty much Optum Care and us that do that at some scale on a multistate basis. On top of that, we are deeply embedded in the workflow. So if you want to do anything in commercial, it's very hard to do if you are not in the technology stack in the RCM workflows and influencing some of that. Otherwise, it's very difficult to take risk if you're just getting data from the payers on three, six, nine-month lag basis, which is what happens with commercial from a downstream perspective. I think as we build that density, it allows us to start managing the population really well. we've demonstrated now that across many payers in many geographies with close to 0.75 million lives, that we can get some care management fees and use those dollars to handhold some of these commercial patients much better, across age cohorts, and I think that's also important. You can do commercial value within the pediatric population, the middle ages, you can do it just pre-Medicare age cohorts, call it, 50-plus and then -- and that's very valuable to the payers as those lives aging into Medicare Advantage or Medicare shared savings. So I think the business model structure fundamentally differentiates us to allow us to do that. And as we've noted, getting care management fee and shared savings on top of fee-for-service fees is a true differentiator. It really increases take home pay for the providers. It's getting them they do share for the good work that they're doing with these lives. And I think it diversifies our book of business and our profitability and EBITDA profile and the stability in our results like you've seen. So if you look at the seven-year empirical data from the time we issued our S-1, we had cycles pre-COVID, during COVID, post-COVID utilization down, utilization up, MA environment challenging, and you've seen every single metric, we progress very consistently on a very thoughtful basis and growing the business and growing all the way down to free cash flow. So I think the commercial book plays a big part in that and the stability of those results across cycles. And I think that truly differentiates us.