Sure. Good Morning, Jennifer. Thank you for the question. So regarding the securities portfolio and the excess liquidity, so as we said, during the first quarter, we averaged about $1.5 billion of excess Fed balances. If you think about the driver, obviously, is the deposit surge, we are up $2.8 billion year-over-year. We were up $300 million just in the first quarter in deposits. We did grow securities by $300 million, the investment portfolio by $300 million in the first quarter. And if you think about the $2.8 billion in deposit surge year-over-year, if you look at LHFI growth year-over-year of about $400 million and securities growth of about $300 million, that's about $700 million. We've deployed about 25% of that deposit growth year-over-year. And in terms of managing it going forward, I would think that we will continue to opportunistically increase the size of the portfolio. I think in the second quarter, something in the neighborhood of $150 million or so, depending on what happens with deposits. But I will just say, in terms of managing that liquidity, when you think about what we are trying to do, we are triangulating between assessing what the effective duration of the deposit surge will really end up being, and you're trying to balance that against your outlook for the economy and interest rates, while at the same time, maintaining a competitive interest rate risk profile. And so, you think about Trustmark, we have a very powerful countercyclical noninterest revenue engine with mortgage banking, which has kicked in here with historically low interest rates. We want to make sure that we have a competitively positioned asset sensitivity as we come out of the pandemic and as market interest rates begin to rise and the Fed eventually normalizes monetary policy. And so as we look at it, we think we are probably underinvested in securities relative to the peer group by a bit. There is the opportunity to do more, but we're trying to balance those things. I mean if you think about it, $1.5 billion sitting at the Fed, if we deployed that and picked up 100 basis points today, that adds about $15 million to annual net interest income. But then you think about, well, if you do that, you put on -- you are putting on 4 to 5 duration assets, the opportunity cost going forward when market interest rates rise and the Fed begins to normalize monetary policy, it can be enormous. And we don't want to put ourselves at a competitive disadvantage. So those are the -- those are our considerations. And again, in summary, I would say that we will continue to opportunistically increase the size of the portfolio.