Yes, thanks, RJ. Well, you speak about philosophy. I mean, I think of the Fed's mandate, price stability at max employment. For us, we've got no equity overhang and ensure that existing shareholders benefit from our new announcements, not kind of opportunists that flip into deals. And that means we need to optimally capitalize the company as we move forward and also be very measured with our ATM use and balanced. And when you get a new deal, you get to look at, hey, if you consider the existing leverage of the company and the impact of the incremental investment, are you off-size in any way compared to your target leverage? And for us, that's 5 to 5.5, and we've become very comfortable at the lower end of that range. And given the environment, we actually chose to build below that range to get some extra fire power for future opportunities consider at Lincoln. And in this situation we weren't off sides in the short-term or in the long-term. And that led us to say, hey, all right, we're in a position to then use the ATM, use the forward, and do it in a balanced way. And we would have done less this quarter if it weren't for some deep interest that we had from some very thoughtful shareholders, and we're able to get more done. And we thought, hey, in this case, given where the stock is, relative cost of equity and debt, cost of equity versus when we underwrote the deals, we'll take the bird in the hand, and we did that. And again, it puts us in a great position with ample cash for our base case 2025 business plan. And as we move forward, we're going to continue to weigh the same things. And my hope is in hindsight, you'll say those guys were thoughtful, balanced, and measured. But we can't predict exactly how it'll play out because it's a function of all these moving variables. But hopefully that gives you some insight.