Sure. Well, let's start with commercial finance. It is -- the priority has been and will continue to be the priority for resource allocation and growth. And we did have -- we had good utilization in the quarter. It was a little lumpy, but the balance has stayed broadly steady. What we didn't see as much are draws. We had lower overall volumes. So when you look at the originations for the quarter they were down. So we had good balances as a percentage of total commitments, but we just didn't have as much draw activity in the fourth quarter. So that cost us a little bit, in what we'll call intra-quarter interest income, right? Sometimes they'll draw for a month or five weeks and then pay it off. And we saw quite a bit of that activity in third quarter. It was very helpful hence the focus on commercial finance and a little bit less so in the fourth quarter. So the balances were steady during the quarter. We just didn't see the draw and payoff activity that generates that marginal interest income during the quarter. We're going into 2024 with some reasonably good pipelines in the health care space. We're adding some new lessors, in lessor finance in the Equipment Finance space. And we have some of the Chicago commercial finance pipeline starting to build. Probably the biggest focus compared to 2023, is that, as we said before, we're repositioning resources into commercial finance from a personnel perspective. This will be essentially, budget neutral. We're putting more resources into commercial finance and less, resources into real estate, given the relative spread and the opportunities. So to that extent, we'll probably have, triple the resources devoted to commercial finance in 2024, than we did in the beginning of 2023. We've gone through an essentially graduate school of credit training, for these personnel. Some customers -- some of them come to us with good C&I experience, in their past or their most recent past. But everybody's had different credit training and different credit experience. So in the fourth quarter, we put all of our credit personnel, including the credit analysts through a graduate style course, so that everybody is up to the same speed as far as credit skills. Now they're going through the product training, given our base of products where we can offer a customer, a standard bank credit loan, an ABL platform or accounts receivable factoring or some combination thereof. That is a unique product set in the market. And we need to make sure they fully understand the product. And how it works to go out and sell it. And then Commercial Finance is going to take the lion's share, within the commercial space of marketing expense. So that is going to be our focus for 2024. The difficulty of course is utilization. As much as we grow commitments, we have any number of commercial customers that aren't using their lines very much. An example, just this week, we have a customer that has a $7 million commitment. Their balance at 12/31 and into January was $700,000, but they recently filed an increase to go to $15 million, because they see some significant seasonal activity coming up. Once that seasonal activity is complete, probably by the end of third quarter they want the commitment to go back down to save them the non-use fee. We can work with them on that. But it just gives you a sense of sometimes, how volatile the line utilization can be. You can build a lot of commitments. You don't always see the utilization right away. And then suddenly something changes. So, some of our borrowers are pretty steady borrowers. It's the nature of their business. Healthcare can be like that. In other cases, it's very seasonal and spotty. And we just have to kind of roll with it. But growing the base of customers and growing the commitment base, all the way from the small business side, business banking down to $100,000 $250,000 lines because we want that Core Checking account on up to the larger corporate exposures that's the focus for 2024. As far as Equipment Finance is concerned, you saw the benefits from an asset-liability perspective, management perspective. You saw the benefits from Equipment Finance. We had approximately $200 million of scheduled payments that we received in 2023 and we were able to reposition that into liquid funds and into originations at much higher rates. So that was a significant benefit to us. And in the fourth quarter, typically that is our strongest originations quarter. Just it's historically always been that way which means of course that, if you originate it in third and fourth quarter you will get the payments, a greater proportion of payments in third and fourth quarter and that's what's happened to us. For 2024, we're going to see approximately $130 million of cash flows coming off the portfolio; the portfolio is smaller. So our goal is to reposition the $130 million into primarily the corporate side, investment grade and rated corporate and then, a little bit of middle market and small ticket. And then, at that point we'll produce as much as a 200 to 250 point increase in yields just from those cash flows alone. And then real estate Real Estate had a quiet year. Rates spiked. We were in the 7's percent for a bit of time. That obviously dampened activity on a number of levels. But here in just the last few weeks, because the treasury curve has come down some, we're starting to see some refinance opportunities come out. We've seen a couple of customers that want to do equity cash-outs because they want to buy a value-add building. Their credit profile with us is strong so we're able to work with them. And what that does is give us a higher-yielding note on the original exposure and of course the higher-yielding assets on the new exposure. So, I still think real estate will be the smallest of the originations in 2024 just because of where the market is right now. But we are starting to see better interest in originations than we did say in second and third quarter and even early fourth because the yield curve has shifted.