No. Alex, it's Joe. I'll take that. There's no change in that view. I mean, naturally, with a softer environment and reduced profitability, our returns are going to look lower on a trailing basis. But in terms of the amount of capital we need to run the firm, in terms of prudent buffers and meaningful or regulatory obligations, there's no change. And the fixed income business is kind of planned for, right, within the amount of capital that we use today. And unsurprisingly, in a softer environment, we deploy less capital than we do in a more expansive environment, right? And so from slide six, when you look at those trailing invested capital numbers and our EBITDA and our return, I would say, one, it includes planning for fixed income, which is a little more capital intensive. We use -- obviously, we use prime brokers. We don't self-clear there, but we are appropriately kind of planned for in the numbers that we deploy. That's kind of -- that's point one. Point two, in terms of the overall leverage, look, we were very fortunate, I think, both from a timing standpoint and from a kind of a management of the leverage in terms of swaps and muting the impact of the higher rates. So, we're very happy with the overall level of debt. It allows us to buy back shares at the various points I've updated the slide in here this quarter, and it allows us to have the flexibility to keep our dividend. So, we are -- we refinanced in early 2022. We got rid of most of the more punitive kind of required cash flow sweeps and amortizations. So, from -- we don't really look at it as whether it's two and a half times, three times. It's a volatile business. We're kind of right -- focused more on the notional level of debt, and we're very, very comfortable with where it is today.