I think it's something that, you know, obviously, we'll continue to watch. What's going on in the industry. And like we've said, you know, I think it's gonna take going through an up cycle to really prove this is not the first time that in my career that I've heard that, you know, that other carriers are wanting to grow or they're adding capacity and that the growth story is gonna be over. I can recall hearing that back in 2016, and we've done a pretty nice job of being able to grow revenue from that point forward. But, you know, it's something that we obviously pay close attention to, and a lot of our confidence about market share comes from customer conversations more than anything. You know, staying in front of our customers, knowing how their business levels are changing, you know, what their strategies going forward are gonna be and how we can add value to their supply chains. And so, you know, we don't add capacity until we're confident that we're gonna be growing in the markets where we're expanding. And that's always been a key part of our expansion strategy. So, you know, I think that with getting to the up cycle, and then, that's probably gonna be the easiest answer to talk about, you know, where is industry capacity versus what our industry volumes looking like. But I don't see any change when we look forward. In terms of what our market share potential might be. Now versus the thinking that we had in place back in 2021, 2022. So we still feel like we've got a long runway for growth and a tremendous amount of opportunity out there ahead of us. And in regards to the insurance question, you know, I think we've done a really nice job in terms of managing those insurance costs. When you look at insurance and claims, on the income statement, it's pretty much been anywhere from 1.1% to 1.3% of revenue if you look back over the last kind of five to ten years, if you will, and it's something, like I mentioned, that we have had to take on some increased exposure. In terms of what our self-insured retention limits are and that's something that, you know, we spend a lot of time going through and planning. With our legal and risk teams to looking at and evaluating what type of risk do we want to take as we build out our insurance tower. And so, you know, there's a lot of strategy that goes in behind that. Obviously, there's no perfect answer. You look at things in hindsight and say, okay. We did this, and here was the result. You know, this year, we just had a bigger step up in terms of that the annual actuarial assessment that we complete in the fourth quarter. And took a little bit larger, you know, entry, if you will, to adjust those existing reserves on the existing claim. So but we do expect, you know, I think last year, we averaged about 1.2% of revenue for the insurance and claims, and I think that's probably gonna go up to closer to the 1.5% like I mentioned. So we'll see a little bit more inflation there. But all in all, I think we've done a very effective job of managing our cost for our insurance program. The other interesting thing that what goes in that line and where you've seen it improve over the long term is, you know, that insurance and claims line. That's our auto accident claims as well as our cargo claims ratio and, you know, our cargo claims ratio, which talked about for years, how we've generated improvement there and had got that balance down to point one. Well, it actually rounds to point zero point zero for this quarter. We just said below zero point one percent, but, you know, we talked about wanting to be on time and claim free. And in the fourth quarter, we were essentially claims free. So very proud of that achievement for the team as well, and it takes off a lot of investment in claim prevention and training and something we're really proud of.