Alright. So, Derek, why don't you address the commodity issue, and I'll address the broader issue? On Suzanne and others? So thanks, Kyle. When you look at the overall Ag, this came off a record year of just under $600 million generated in Ags last year. When you look at it in the first quarter of this year, we set another ADV record not just in futures, but in options overall. The business was up 23%. You look at the OI trends overall. We set multiple records in OI, not just in options, but the aggregate options plus futures. In fact, we just set a record 5.1 million open interest in options just last week on the 21st of April. So you look at the aggregate story, options plus futures, we're actually seeing record levels of open interest. We're on track to exceed the record that we set in February with another record assuming we continue the trends over the next couple of days. When you look at the pockets that you're talking about, yes, we have seen some trailing off in futures, but we've seen that more than offset in the pickup in open interest in options. Hence, the overall record levels. We did see some pullback in livestock, particularly feeder cattle. In the future side. Options grew, but overall in aggregate, this is very much a risk-on environment in ag. And that's the benefit that's happened in the market where you've got the grains and oil seeds, we've got the dairy, we've got the lumber, and we've got the livestock. In ag markets overall, we're coming off a record quarter, record OI. Options record, and we're seeing record levels of non-US activity. So I would say that deleveraging is not something we're seeing in aggregate across ag, very much the opposite, which is a risk-on environment. We are seeing some shifts between products inside the ag's market overall. So Kyle, let me address some of the other questions about the broader markets and just talk about some of the fundamentals that we're seeing that I don't know. I've been in this business for probably as long as anybody, and I have not seen some of the fundamental factors that we're seeing today. So our open interest, as Derek referenced, is up 7% across the board in total. So I think that's an important factor. You're also looking at the reason why people may not be deleveraging. It's very difficult to take risk off or deleverage your hedges when the probably the most uncertain times we've ever seen in our history. No one's ever traded through these tariffs in the marketplaces to any extent over the last thirty plus years. We never had $38 trillion of debt on the books of the United States of America. There's debt on books of countries all around the world. There is so much risk out there associated with margins being massively thin that if you do not participate, I don't think you have the luxury of not participating in this volatile time just because if you do not participate, you could be out of business the next day. That's how quick these markets are moving, and that's the size of the moves associated with them. So I think that's a big part of the reason why we're not seeing deleveraging like you may have seen like I've seen twenty-five, thirty years ago, when the markets got very volatile and people just kind of put their hands in their pockets and tried to wait to see when there's some clarity. You don't have that luxury today because of the fundamentals there, not only here in the United States but globally. So I think that's a big part of why we're not seeing the deleveraging, and I think that's why our products are critically important for our user base today.